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!

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TH E

ASBURY THEOLOGICAL

JOURNAL

ALL 1992

olume 47, Num er 2

Advantages of the D. Stephen Long

Course of

Study School

Transfiguration of Scripture: Charles Wesley's Poetic Hermeneutic John R. Tyson The Miracle of Atheism Laurence W. Nood

5

17

43

Reflections of Some Norms for Prison Rufus Burrow

Theologico-Ethical Ministry

Methodist Beginnings in Kenneth Cain Kinghorn Book Reviews Jack M. Sasson,

Kentucky,

1783-1845

79

93

107

Jonah:

A New Translation with David L. Thompson

Introduction, Commentary,

and Interpretation. red B. Craddock, Luke Interpretation: A Bi le Commentary for Teaching and Preaching . Joseph R. Dongell Judith M. Gundry olf, Paul Perseverance, Staying In and Palling

Away.

Joseph S. Wang

Harold A. Netland, Dissonant oices: Religious Pluralism and the uestion of Truth. Jerry L. Walls Alasdair Maclntyre, Three Rival ersions of Moral En uiry: Encyclopedia, and Tradition: Genealogy, eing Gifford Lectures delivered in the University of Edin urgh in 1988. David W. Lut Michel Weyer, Heiligungs wengung und Methodismus in deutschen Spracharum Einfuhrung in ein Kapitel Methodistischer rommigkeitsgeschichte Jahrhunderts mit ausgewahlten uellen und Bi liographe.

David Bundy John . Kilner, Who Lives Who Dies Ethical Criteria in Patient Selection. Arthur J. Dyck John . Kilner, Who Lives Who Dies Ethical Criteria in Patient Selection.

Phillip

M. Hall

1


ASBURY THEOLOGICAL

JOURNAL

EDITORIAL BOARD

BOARD O

David L. McKenna, Pu lisher President

Carpenter Director of Graduate Studies Professor of Old Testament He rew Bethel College George W. Coats Professor of Old Testament Le ington Theological Seminary Stanley Hauerwas Professor of Theological Ethics Duke University

Ro ert T. ice

Bridges,

Editor in

President

Eugene

Chief

Seminary Advancement

Laurence W. Wood, Editor rank Paul Morris Professor

of Systematic Theology Jerry L. Walls, Associate Editor Associate Professor of Philosophy of Religion

Helmut Nausner

Superintendent

Stone, Book Review Editor Associate Professor of Old Testament

Lawson

Methodist Church in Austria

Scott R. Burson, Managing Editor Director of Communications

Michele L.

Sparks, Assistant

RE ERENCE

E.

W. Richard

Stegner Professor of New Testament Garrett-Evangelical Theological Seminary David D. Bundy Li rarian IAssociate Professor of Church History Christian Theological Seminary

Editor

Editorial Assistant

Carolyn B. Smith, Assistant Editor Mary Jackson and David Cupps Student Representatives

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ough

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Advantages of the Course of Study School The

D. Stephen Long

The formation of

ly superior This is

pastors provided y the Course of Study School is potential of pastors provided y seminary. statement for me to make, ecause I am fully invested in aca

to the education

an

ironic

demic education. I did my seminary work at Duke Divinity School which I con sider Methodism's premier seminary , I earned the Ph.D. from Duke University

which I consider

work

e

to

director of

as

one

of the nation's

premier universities , and I currently Divinity School, hence my academic setting, and yet I want to argue that the greater potential for pastoral formation than do cur

continuing

ias. I work and live in

an

education at Duke

Study seminary education. ar from desiring to ite the hand that feeds me, I simply want to ring efore the attention of The United Methodist Church a group of people who are not treated fairly, and argue that one reason they are maltreated is ecause of the inordinate advantages people like me possess ecause my education is highly valued, whereas their formation is not. Course of

School has

rent forms of

I must

e careful not to caricature I do not want to devalue my own academic devalue seminary education. Given the constraints under which

training,

nor

uates

formed well for

how well they do their o s. Some seminary grad pastoral ministry, oth ecause of, and in spite of, their academic education. Some Course of Study students are formed poorly for pas toral ministry even though they have a distinct advantage over seminary gradu seminaries

ates.

are

it is

ama ing

Thus, my argument

Study

students

suggest

D.

work,

over

all

e reduced to the

cannot

seminary

students for

superiority of all Course pastoral ministry. I simply want

that the constraints under which seminaries

Stephen Long

of the Center for Continuing Education Divinity School in Durham, North Carolina.

The As ury Theological

Journal

ol. 47 No. 2

5

to

operate, and the lack of

is the Director

Christian Ethics at Duke

of

and also

a

Lecturer in

all 1992


Long

those constraints for Course of

Study, provide the possi iHty for the Course of Study School to e a superior way to train pastors. In my seminary course on Methodism, I learned a out the Course of Study School. I knew it e isted, ut not until I taught in the school, and ecame the director of it, did I actually e perience in living color the engaging people who e ist as Methodism's lower class ministers. Like me, many Methodists might e unfamiliar with what the Course of Study School is, and even those who do know we have a Course of Study School may yet e unfamiliar with the people who make it up. Allow me to e plain the Course of Study and provide a general and therefore woefully inade uate description of its students. In the United Methodist Church, pastors are instructed in theology in two ways they can either attend an accredited seminary or they can enroll in the Course of Study School. Seminary re uires full-time academic study for three to four years. Course of Study School is an alternative, re uiring one month annual ly for five to nine years. It is for those people who either do not have the financial resources, the educational uahfications, or the time to enter seminary. Although these two options are offered for the training of pastors, immense ine uities e ist etween them. A seminary education will open up many opportunities for a potential pastor, and almost assure full mem ership in some annual conferences. However, Course of Study graduates do not have the same opportunities. They can enter into full mem ership only under the e ceptional promise clause. Course of Study students ear the urden of the itinerant system. They move more fre uently than seminary graduates. Insofar as they are not full mem ers in annual an conference, they are not guaranteed appointments, and can e e ected from their pulpits if a seminary graduate comes along who needs an appoint ment. They receive less pay, have larger circuits, and serve on fewer oards and agencies. In short, they are United Methodism's lower class. The people who are willing to e su ected to this status come from a variety of ackgrounds. Some were successful usiness people who felt called to the ministry late in life. Some have e tensive educational ackgrounds, including Ph.D.s. Others are arely literate. All have worked in some other field efore entering ministry some took care of children, some drove trucks, some worked in coal mines. Whatever their occupation, no one can charge them with leaving their previous employment for upward mo ility. All of them have made sacri fices to

e availa le to the Methodist Church as pastors. etween Course of Study and seminary

graduates is unfortunate. su servient class. A asic understanding of us tice alone renders the difference etween Course of Study and seminary gradu ates intolera le. Yet the disparity is dou ly pro lematic ecause the Course of than makes etter sense of United Methodist official theology of The

No

disparity

one

should

e forced into

Study does seminary. Why, then, for ordination

Because

a

ministry

seminary education remain the ironclad standard urOike the theory, the practice of ordination is ailturally does


The

elitist. The Course of

Study

Advantages of the

School offers

a

Course

of Study

School

potentially superior pastoral

7

formation

inferior clerical status. I will su stantiate this argument in three y irst, I will set forth The United Methodist Church's theology of ministry.

followed

an

steps. Second, given this theology, I will show how the Course of Study School is poten tially superior to current seminary education. Third, 1 will address why ordination continues to e inde ted to seminary education, even though the Course of Study is theologically superior. After su stantiating my claim, I will conclude with some

possi le prescriptions to remedy the ine uity THEOLOGY O

etween the two programs.

MINISTRY

Within United Methodism, the gories the representative and the

ministry of the church falls into two cate general. The general ministry elongs to all Christians y virtue of their aptism. In effect, aptism is a type of ordination into the ministry of witness, service, and community. Thus, all Christians are ministers. Within the general ministry e ists the representative ministry. The representa tive ministry includes the ordained and diaconal ministries. People in these min istries are called from within the general ministry, and evidence special gifts, God's grace, and promise of usefulness. ' The call, according to the Discipline, is inward as it comes to the individual and outward through the udge twofold ment and validation of the Church. The calling out of representative ministers is validated only y their usefulness to the general ministry of the church. The general ministry is charged with calling from its ranks people to represent them in ministry. Thus, the general and representative ministry cannot e separated. The latter e ists only to assist the former. The general ministry not only validates the call of representative ministers, it is also responsi le to form them. In the description of the representative ministry in United Methodism, no discussion of theological education is mentioned. Instead, we find the language of call, gift and usefulness. This language does not lend itself well to current interpretations of education it is well suited to the language of formation. In the present day academy, education is often understood as technolog ical. It makes new things. Standard academic dogma a out education assumes the false Platonic notion that people would choose the good if they only knew what it was. What prevents people from knowing the good is that they are falsely inde ted to their past histories. Thus, through the methodological process of dou t, persons ecome enhghtened. can e distanced from their past and therefore Nowhere is this understanding of education more ade uately defined than in the American Academy of Religion's statement Li eral Learning and the Religion Ma or. This notion of religious education understands that convic tion may impede the process of the ground rules of the academic study of religion. Thus the academic study of religion re uires a distance etween the person eing educated and the community he or she represents. Of course, what etween is a new tradition with its own community and institutions. The comes


8

Long

American

Academy of Religion's

statement is

uite

clear a out this:

The

premises on which we conduct our study are located institutionally and intellectually in centers of learning that have their origins in the medieval European university and have een methodologically informed y critical traditions that have een developed since the European Enhghtenment.

Through seminary education, the church

now

mediates

this tradition which is in

e pHcit

etween the church and the pastor

re elHon

as

against

what counts for

accepta le pastoral practice. Course of Study students

are not as thoroughly constituted y this mediation who have gone the traditional intellectual route which culmi nates in seminary. This is, of course, why we find Course of Study students so as are

those of

us

frightening at times, particularly their pu Hc displays of emotion. They have not een sufficiently inducted into the European Enlightenment tradition that severs mind from ody. They are truly different, even if they never use the term dif ference, differance, or the other. Thus, they maintain the potential for pas toral formation in a way that those of us who live the European Enlightenment tradition do not. Of course, one of the difficulties of the Course of Study is that we use

it

way to entice persons to desire that other tradition and thus possi ility for formation.

as a

lessen their

Pastoral formation within which

we

assumes an

form

people,

immediate relation

and their role

as

pastor

etween the

we

knowledge always

in the church. It is

teleological in that the purpose for the knowledge is not simply to create a gen erali ed enlightened person, ut the fulfillment of a traditioned role, community specific, as pastor-scholar. or that reason, the constant presence of the commu nity to which one is appointed is a necessary feature of one's formation. ormation does not overcome one's community such an agonistic practice is inappropriate. ormation enhances one's a ility to respond and function within the community that renders intelligi le one's formation in the first place. Education cannot make clergy they are formed y the community of faith which recogni es their gifts, calls them to represent the whole community, and

them for that purpose. The outward call of the church is a pastoral formation ecause the church calls y giving certain people specific tasks, there y training The tasks themselves form pastors. Theological education is them to e uses

pastors.

something of an o Because

means

ymoron

pastors

are

theological formation

formed,

of their formation. One

not

made,

component

of

is the

education

pastoral

intelligi le term.

cannot

e the

primary

formation is instruction in

right teaching, ut this instruction is never for the purpose of teaching alone. Right teaching is for the purpose of critically reflecting upon one's formation. Right teaching is insepara le from right worship and right living. The three are ine tri which is a result of right wor ca ly connected. To think rightly effects right living which effects right thinking. Because ship right worship constitutes right living


The

Advantages of the

Course

of Study

School

9

you cannot decisively separate right living, right worship and right thinking, the Church maintains that right teaching has conse uences of ultimate importance. If either the Church refuses to take seriously the formation of those with spe

gifts, or the seminary usurps its role in seeking to make gifts, then the gener ministry suffers the general ministry is dependent upon the representative ministry for its effectiveness. cial al

This is

gests

an

odd claim for in

our

that the future for the Church etween the

situation conventional wisdom sug depends upon the reakdown of the distinc

present

general and representative ministry. The call to empower the mean laity conceding the power of the representative, and particu the ordained larly ministry, to the laity. The power of the ordained e ists in the of Word, Sacrament and Order. In these three. Sacrament is central, preservation for the sacraments of aptism and Eucharist preserve the order and the Word. Thus, those who seek to empower the laity through conceding the power of the ordained to the laity, insist that the future will depend on more and more laity cele rating the sacraments. This is a tragic mistake, ecause ordination functions as the est way to empower the general ministry of the church. To remove the distinction etween clergy and laity will not empower the laity, ut disempower them. The general ministry of the church authori es the ordained ministry, and thus depends on that ministry. This is not a popular position nevertheless it is true. The ordained ministry empowers all Christians for their ministry ecause the ordained are validated and formed y the Church to preserve order through the cele ration of the sacraments, through right teaching and through the up uild ing of the community. When this office is lost, then the unity of the ministry is a andoned. Each person is allowed to decide for her or himself concerning teaching and sacrament. Let me give an e ample to illustrate this. Several years ago I worked as a local preacher for the Cari ean Council of Methodist Churches in Honduras. We had forty local preachers, one ordained elder and twelve churches. The elder would travel throughout the connection administering the sacraments. Under the direc tion of the elder, the local preachers would preach and teach. We had one ener getic, articulate young preacher who had great success as an evangelist. On one Sunday morning, he showed up on the each in clerics and held a revival. At the end of the revival one person asked him what prevented him from apti ing. Was he not called y God Why then could he not apti e This young local preacher said nothing prevented him, and so he apti ed people that day. This caused a great scandal throughout the church and the local preachers assem led to discuss the issue. They did not find the aptisms invaUd, ut they did rescind the young man's preaching license for they reali ed that he had violated the unity of the church y taking upon himself a function for which he was not validated y the whole community. Through unilaterally deciding to apti e, he set himself up tion

has

come

to


10

Long

a ove the church

community. They were not given the opportunity to form him, and then vaHdate that formation. Thus, he violated the order of the church. The sacraments are not a function of individual prerogative they are for the

ordering

of the

community

in its

individuals, each retaining his

unity.

The church is not

a

motley assem ly

of

life the church is a gathered commu from out of nation, tri e, tongue, and people which is to e one. That nity every is an ordered and the role of the ordained ministry is to preserve the unity unity, or

her

own

through right preaching, teaching and worship. or the purpose of this unity, the church sets aside certain people and ordains them y giving them the power to cele rate the sacraments. Ordination cannot e separated from this order

power. To cele rate the sacraments without the validation of ordination is lation of the unity of the church.

a

vio

preachers were theologically self-educated. Yet they theology ministry etter than the powerful United Methodist Church with its educational institutions. They reali ed that their ministry was connected to the Church Universal, and the est way they were e uipped for their ministry was through the preservation of the order found in the distinction etween lay and clergy. All those lay pastors knew that the ministry of the single ordained person was also their ministry. Thus, they could e satisfied that they served in their capacity and he served in his, and through these differences, the church was empowered for its ministry. In witnessing this e traordinary act, I saw a theological integrity in a small, struggling third world church which United Methodism lacks. The energetic young preacher was uite popular. When he left he took a large num er of youth with him. He was received into an American missionary Pentecostal church, and the struggling Methodists lost mem ers, financial resources and These Honduran local

understood the

of

influence. But the Methodist Church in Honduras knew that Jesus did not call them to count his sheep, ut to feed them. Thus, they did not hesitate, for they

were

the

convinced in the end that this of the

integrity theology

gospel.

was

the most

appropriate

way to maintain

ministry is insepara le from the vaHdation and formation of the whole church. The church must call and set aside certain people for its own sake in so doing, it forms them. Once it has done so, these people and no others of the sacramental ordering of the church's life. This est must have the The

of

power

If others than those validated y the church e uips the church for its ministry. suffers. The voice of powerful individuals are given this authority, the church cathoHc and apostolic Church. usurps the voice of the one, holy,

OUR THEOLOGY O

MINISTRY AND THE POWERLESSNESS O

COURSE

O STUDY SCHOOL STUDENTS claim that the Course of Study School is So what has all this to do with my education The relevance is uite simple the superior to seminary

theologically


The

Advantages of the

Course

of Study

School

11

Course of

Study School etter e presses this understanding of the theology of ministry than does the seminary ecause the Course of Study has more potential for pastoral formation while seminary is constrained y notions of educa tion. Yet, ironically, local pastors who graduate from Course of Study School are often refused ordination and treated as inferior clergy. The pro lem centers on the inordinate responsi ility placed on seminary edu cation. In practice, the seminary is asked y the church to make pastors. The seminary has itself usurped its su ordinate role in the formation of pastors as well. Seminary education works with the component of pastoral formation we have called right thinking. If it is asked to produce right worship and right liv ing, then we have made seminary into the church. The seminary is not the church. It can only work with the resources the church provides, it cannot create them de

novo.

insepara ility of right living, worship and thinking, pastoral forma o viously finds its primary focus in the Church. Yet my e perience of edu cation has een that most people assume right thinking can e separated from right living and worship. How much seminary education assumes that we must first e faithful and good worshippers efore we can e rightly trained as theolo gians Does seminary education assume any type of formation necessary efore engaging in the right thinking component of pastoral formation Or does it assume that through appropriate theories and concepts pastors can e made Despite the theory of seminary education, too often the practice seeks to make professionals through the application of appropriate theories and concepts. The difference etween seminary and Course of Study is reflected in their cur ricula. In a seminary curricula, people are given choice. If someone desires to spend more time in church administration and pastoral care rather than theolo gy, then the student is given that opportunity. In the Course of Study School, the curriculum is set y the church and choice is not a concern. Students do not have options. The curriculum re uires students to understand first their role their usefulness for the church. Thus, first year students are taught The Pastor as Theologian. But seminary curricula often are inde ted to educational Given the

tion

models which

assume

it is up to the student to define

nary curricula even help students develop her or elieve.... The Course of Study does not tolerate such

his her role. Some semi

his individual

church's

crediamus

we

elieve.

Of

course we

nonsense

do this

it

Credo

imposes

ecause

we

I

the

do not

y Course of Study students so we treat them different ly, even though, generally speaking. Course of Study students have a greater amount of lived e perience in the faith in all types of situations than do semi want to

e em arrassed

nary students. If we were to trust anyone to choose, Study students rather than seminarians.

we

should trust Course of

Seminary teaching is more inde ted to professional guilds than to the church. Thus, disciplines such as pastoral care, ethics, administration. Ancient Near East


12

Long

studies. Christian origins, etc., cated. Be assured that these

the parameters for how disciphnes do form people, set

pastors

are

to

e edu

they people speciali ed professional guilds rather than in pastoral skills. Course of Study teaching does not allow the imposition of the disciplinary guilds as readily as does seminary teaching. Course of Study students do not care a out eing formed into disciplinary guilds they know they are pastors. The idea that distinctions are possi le etween worship, pastoral care and ethics reveals deep pro lems within the seminary curriculum. Pastoral care has to do with the cure of souls, not psychological well- eing. The cure of souls can not e the province of one discipline defined y current psychological models it re uires an understanding of liturgy and the Christian life. To separate pastoral duties into disciplines dissects the pastor like a frog in a high school iology course. A dissected frog might e useful to understand the flow of gastro-intestinal uices, ut a dissected pastor fragments the ministry of the church. A dissect ed frog cannot e put ack together for its function as a living creature neither

into each of these

can a

dissected

ut

form

pastor.

Unfortunately, the Course of Study School also divides into disciplines, ut, fortunately, it does so less successfully than does seminary. The various disci plines are ualified y the title The Pastor As.... the pastor as interpreter of the Bi le, rather than Ancient Near East specialist the pastor as theologian, rather than philosopher the pastor as caring person, rather than resident psy chologist. In the Course of Study School, the notion of pastor provides conti nuity which gives students more resistance to vivisection. In seeking academic respecta ility, seminary education often ustifies its place law, medical or usiness schools. This education cre competent professionals who, on the asis of their speciali ed information,

in academic life much like ates

compara le to other professionals. The Course of Study School does not need ustification as academically respecta le. It does not ustify itself on the asis of creating competent, speciali ed professionals, ut on the asis of its usefulness are

for the church's

ministry.

for the superiority of the Course of Study School is that these less prone to e competitive with each other ecause they are all asically serving the same type of church. They have no reason to seek to use an education as a way to achieve an upwardly mo ile church. Because they are dis couraged from competing with each other, soHdarity occurs more readily. Their are forms them into a guild etter than when Another

students

are

solidarity that

reason

success

pastoral people taught through con uering the largest church possi le. Study School is theologically superior ecause it provides for

is achieved

The Course of

seminary does not. The educational models not only inhi it education pastoral formation, seminary must e separated from that thinking assume right right liv they often actually need the to of distance a student from her The mythical story ing and worship. the

possi iHty of formation

which define much of

in

a

way


The

Advantages of the

Course

of Study

for the sake of education creates the academic

community

School

13

community.

This

story also assists in the passage of students from the communities which formed them ripping apart right living and right worship from right thinking.

O ectivity, or self-distancing, is, and has een for some time, a rigid orthodo y against which you cannot o ect. Not only does the Christian community suffer from this myth, other communities critical of modern rationality do so as well. In Mar ist thought, a distinction is made etween traditional and organic intellectuals.

A traditional intellectual

was someone

who,

in the process of

ecoming a Mar ist intellectual, so a andoned her lower class up ringing that despite what she writes, her lifestyle etrays that she is nothing more than a tra ditional intellectual. On the other hand, an organic intellectual is someone who did not a andon her class in ecoming an intellectual. The difference etween a traditional and organic intellectual is found in the effectiveness or ineffectiveness of o ectivity to distance the student from her communal formation. Although the Mar ists would not appreciate me using their terms for the train ing of theologians, the terms fit nicely for the distinction etween many seminary students and the Course of Study students. Seminary education asically accepts the distancing myth. Because many seminary students have received the disad vantages of a good education which effectively distanced them from their moral communities, they can e nothing ut traditional intellectuals. On the other hand. Course of Study students have often received the advantages of a poor education which did not successfully distance them from the church. They approach the Course of Study with a aversion to o ectivity which helps them e etter theolo gians for they know what they do must have direct relevance for church life. Thus, they have greater potential for eing organic intellectuals. This is not to say that all distancing from communities is a ad thing of course it is not. We all need to

And the lack of means

do

they

e distanced from

distancing

often

are

of Course of

some

Study

communities which

capture

us.

students from their communities

committed to communities

we

find

unaccepta le. Yet how pastoral formation

communities for

corrupt people myth of o ectivity, ut y providing a vision of the church which allows us to e critical of the ways our lives are captured y communities other than that which constitutes the ody of Christ. Course of Study students are not taught to e uncritical. They are taught to e critical of the disparity etween who their church is and what, in fact, it practices. But they are not taught that rationality re uires a straction from the church community. And thus they have greater potential to learn this lesson and have it effect their entire lives. The gifts of ministry are not technological innovations. That is why we call them gifts. Because the theology of ministry is fundamentally connected to validation and formation y the church and not the academy, the Course of Study School is theologically superior. It has greater potential to understand its role as assisting the formation of pastors. we

Not

est distance

through

the

from


14

Long

WHY THEN IS SEMINARY THE NORM If my understanding of the theology of ministry, and my reading of the differ etween the Course of Study School and seminary, is correct, then the ues

ences

why is seminary the norm and Course of Study School made the e ception e planation is that United Methodist ordination practices are elitist. Methodists moved culturally and socially upward during the last uarter of the nineteenth century. Upward social mo ility re uires upward cultural capa ilities which are often achieved through education. When the Methodists moved upward, they ecame em arrassed y their previous resistance to acade mic institutions. They wanted to dispel the notion that Methodist preachers were

tion arises

One

uneducated

ackwoodsmen.

upward mo ility falsely e uated educated with academic training. It comple . In the Wi ard of O , the scarecrow's uest for knowledge was fulfilled merely y the conferral of an academic degree, as if the letters M.Div., Ph.D., D.Min., could e e uated with knowledge, wisdom or theological formation. The early Methodists did not have academic credentialing they did have theological formation. John Wesley re uired it. Of one lay preacher who, upon interrogation, stated he had no taste for reading, Wesley responded, Sir, contract a taste for it or return to your trade. How many semi nary graduates read something more than church growth literature after gradua tion today And rances As ury often used his long travels as a time to form young pastors theologically. As early as 181 the Methodists developed a Course of Study School which was to e presided over y elders to train new pastors, to introduce them into regular, life-long ha its of reading and reflecting theologi cally. The Course of Study School delayed the founding of seminaries ecause education could e many pastors argued they were unnecessary. Theological This

suffers from the scarecrow

had without them. But

egan cropping Study

appro imately

a

decade later, educational institutions re uired pastors to go through the

education

up. Seminary School in their

seminary curricula up until the second world of the Course after which, Study School and the seminary went their sepa war, rate ways. Now pastors are more defined y their seminary affiliation than their Course of

commonality as

Methodist pastors.

As the educational institutions grew in power, the churchly forms of training diminished. Even when the educational institutions roke free from any form of was more highly valued y the church churchly control, the academic training is result The that, of Course than the despite the fact that the training.

Study

School is the oldest educational institution in Methodism, it its graduates the same sufficient does not have power to offer privileges other

Course of

Study

academic institutions do. The options should not e uneducated or trained in the academy. This is a cultural elitism. As Methodists a false distinction which instantiates increasing seminary ecame the norm. The normative influmoved

ly

upward culturally,


The

ence

of the

promise mo ility.

seminary rule '

are

Advantages of the

and the

condescending

residual elements of Methodism's

That the normative role of

elitism is

empirically

demonstrated

dents have within the church.

Course

of Study

School

15

e ceptional upward cultural

notion of

attempt

at

seminary education is a result of cultural y the lack of power Course of Study stu

they are appeased is y allowing them to cele rate the sacraments. allowing local pastors to cele rate the sacraments is to grant them ordination. Remem er that our theology of ministry sets people aside for their usefulness to the ministry of all Christians through ordering the church for min istry in the world through Word and Sacrament. Thus, to grant people the One way

In essence,

power to do this, is in effect to ordain them. According to Methodist Church law, local pastors are authori ed to cele rate the sacraments. But a distinction must e made here etween what we legally

allow, and what

our theology asserts. Legally, we say that they operate as an ishop's power, and in fact they operate at the re uest of district superintendents, yet theologically neither ishops nor district superintendents

e tension of the

have the power to ordain on their own without the church's presence. Ordination elongs to the whole church the church alone can estow that

power. Thus to allow individuals to estow the power of ordination dissociates the ond etween the representative ministry and the general ministry. This

analogous

en oying the intimacies of married life without fidelity. We tell local pastors to do what the ordained can do, ut we deny them the calling to ordained ministry. The church is uncom mitted to them, even when they are committed to the church. If local preachers have the re uisite gifts and graces, then the church should practice

is

to

someone

the commitment of marital

validate their call and ordain them. Academic education should not uisite for ordination.

ministry.

not make

Refusing

We make ordination

theologians

to ordain local a

preachers destroys

our

e

a

prere

theology

function of academic education. Education

of

can

the church must form them.

PRESCRIPTIONS who are denied ecclesial a group of lower class ministers were unfortunate the reason that for sole enough to e orn into a power they lower socio-economic class which denied them access to educational opportuni

The creation of

ministry late in life within a church constantly speak ing for the poor and oppressed is more than ironic it is tragic. This situation needs urgent and immediate attention. ollowing are five prescriptions to egin ties,

or

that

they

entered

to address this situation.

1.

The

We,

as a

church,

seminary rule

2. The Course of

theological

must disassociate ordination and academic accreditation.

should

e a olished.

Study School should

education of

pastors,

and the

accepta le alternative route for the e ceptional promise clause a olished. e

an


1

Long

3. Alternative forms of

the pastor

as

apprenticeship

theologian

theological should

model that refuses to

formation which take

e created and

accept

to distance themselves from the church to

4. The role of the church

a

seriously

implemented

rationality

e educated.

which

the role of

ased

re uires

on an

students

only official ordaining agency must e recap illing pulpits supply-side economics must give way to a of theological understanding ordering the faithful through Word and Sacrament. The role of the district superintendent will move away from ureaucrat manager tured.

as a

as

the

matter of

to the preserver of the sacramental life of the church. 5. Seminary education must e reconnected to the church

so

that it under

stands its purpose as one component in pastoral formation. It must not upon as the primary means y which pastors are formed.

e relied

Notes

of Discipline of The United Methodist Church Nashville, Tennessee: The United Pu lishing House, 1988 p. 114. 2. American Academy of Religion A Report to the Profession: Li eral Learning and the Religion Ma or Scholars Press, 1990 p. 13. L The Book

Methodist

3.

I id., pp. 15-1 .

Readings in Mar ist Sociology Clarendon Press, 1983 Story of American Methodism Nashville: A ingdon Press, 1983

4. Antonio Gramsci The Intellectuals in

5.

rederick Norwood The

pp. 217-222.


Transfiguration of Scripture: Charles Wesley's Poetic Hermeneutic

John

R. Tyson

INTRODUCTION Charles

Wesley 1707-1788 ,

reate of the movement, was,

as

was

of the

one

also

a

patriarchs

founder of the

of Methodism and

Holy

Clu

poet-lau

at O ford.

He

John Gam old remem ered, a man made for friendship his cheerfulness and vivacity, would refresh his friend's heart. George

his classmate

who, y Whitefield, future fiery evangelist, then student the young around the

men

drawn into the circle of

Wesleys,

and Charles

sion. This triumvirate of

men

spiritual

College,

was one

formation which

ecome the focal

figures

in

of

gathered

ecame the instrument of Whitefield' s

would later

English George Whitefield

at Pem roke

a

conver

revival

Isles and American Colonies. Charles followed his older

that shook the

open-air evangelism. propriety, Charles roke down the ridge and ecame desperate on June 24, 1739, preaching to near ten thousand helpless sinners waiting for the Word, in rother and

Although

it

was an

in the innovation of

affront to his frail health and

sense

of ecclesiastical

Moorfields.

The younger Wesley ecame an effective evangelist, and the crowds that flocked to hear him soon found that a musician's voice and the poet's way with

preacher to e preferred even over his more Sleepest, and The Cause and Cure of Earth uakes, carried in John Wesley's pu lished works, were Charles's compo sitions. ' A collection of his early shorthand sermons have een recently discov ered and pu lished. But Charles Wesley's homiletical corpus is dwarfed y that of his rother this is due in part, to Charles's facility at preaching e tempore. words made Charles

famous

John

R.

rother.

Tyson

is

a

Wesley

a

Awake Thou That

Professor of Theology at Houghton College in Houghton, New

The As ury Theological

Journal

ol. 47 No. 2

York.

all 1992


18

Tyson

In most cases, after 1739, there simply were no written sermons or notes to mark the delivery of his many homilies. Thus, hymns have ecome Charles's most lasting contri ution.

While he wrote a few hymns during the Georgia e periment, Charles did not egin writing hymns in earnest until after his own version of an Aldersgate E perience, which preceded John Wesley's conversion y two days in the water shed month of May, 1738.' In his ournal entry for Tuesday, May 23, Charles reported that: At nine I egan an hymn upon my conversion, ut was persuaded to reak off, for fear of pride. Later that same day he finished the hymn, and when John Wesley visited Charles on his sick ed, Wednesday, May 24, they sang the hymn together in an impromptu cele ration: Towards ten, my rother was rought in triumph y a troop of our friends, and declared, T elieve ' We sang the hymn with great oy, and parted with prayer. ' rom that inauspicious egin would follow an level of ning unprecedented literary productivity. Initially, Charles's hymn writing went hand in hand with the Wesley an evan gelism. His ournal locates his hymns in the larger conte t of daily ministerial duties. They were written to e sung with his preaching services, in fellowship with Christian friends, or as a portion of his own devotional life. Many of his most famous hymns were written in the midst of a ministry that often included four or five sermons a day in as many towns.' After his marriage to the lovely Sarah Gwynne 1749 the increase of family responsi ilities curtailed Charles's incessant travel as his health also failed and roke repeatedly, he ceased to itin erate, turning more and more directly to the task of writing verse.' Over the course of his seventy-nine years, Charles Wesley composed more than 9,000 hymns and sacred poems nearly 4,000 of which were pu lished in his lifetime, although more than 2,000 of them remain unpu lished today. Well over half of his compositions pu lished and unpu lished were called Short Hymns on Select Passages of Scripture. They were poetic e positions of Scripture pas

sages, as much a i lical commentary and reflection of their writer's i lical hermeneutic as John Wesley's more famous Notes Upon the Old and New Testaments. Their role, however, was confined to the realm of verse, since few, if any, of the Short

Hymns

were

sung in

CHARLES'S POETIC DICTION Charles Wesley's poetry was written during of

English

literature. The

great

a

religious Wesley's lifetime.'

very torrid time in the

luminaries of

English

verse,

history including

and Milton, though physically a sent from the scene, were still influential through their successors a host of e ually popular neo-classicists Nor is it surprising that the of these or

Shakespeare

Augustans. ''

phraseology

literary

into Charles Wesley's hymns Dryden, Prior, Cowley, giants found their way and Milton, are echoed in Wesley's verse. His Young, as well as Shakespeare for many of the same poets identified letters voice his admiration y echo or


Transfiguration of Scripture

allusion in Charles's

hymns. Cowley, Spencer, Milton,

Prior and

19

Young

are

among the contemporary poets Wesley mentioned as eing of interest to him. ' Charles and his rother, John, oth received the O ford A.M. in Classics, which was considered the appropriate degree for ministerial preparation. He was

educated and wrote his poetry during a literary renaissance which looked to style and mode of e pression. James Johnson, who has written

the classics for its

of the standard treatments of the

Augustan literature, identified the applica philology as the unifying characteristic of the neoclassicism of mid-eighteenth-century English literature. There are numerous reminiscences of classical forms and phrases in Charles Wesley's hymns. Henry Bett has identified clear applications of irgil's Aeneid, as well as echoes of Horace, Homer and Plato. But John Ratten ury aptly drew attention to the rela tively slight occurrence of classical allusions in Wesley's verse: One allusion in every 2,000 lines does not give more than a pleasant literary flavour to the total work. '' The same could also e said of Charles's use of Patristic and Anglican i lical images and language overshadowed, y far, the religious resources

one

tion of classical forms and

allusions which Charles drew from other

sources.

appropriate Wesley among those eighteenth-cen and Swift, Addison, in whom the classical and Dryden, Pope Christian traditions happily merged. He was at home in the writings of irgil, Augustine or Saint Paul, and in the original languages Not only did Charles study the classics and allow their phrases to creep into his own verses, he also As Donald used classical etymology to refine the purity of his diction. Davie pointed out, in Wesley, as in Johnson, the lunted meaning or lurred Charles's metaphor comes sharper and live again in a sort of latinate pun. and like evidence this of words virtue, meek, gentle almy, application etymological purity. to count Charles

Thus it is

tury writers, like

CHARLES WESLEY'S HERMENEUTIC It is hard to

imagine

anyone who has

een

as

saturated with

Scripture

as

the

Wesleys were phrases seeped from them, not only in sermon and in ut in of their casual speech and private writings. Hence, also the course song, i lical

Ratten ury wryly o served, a skillful man, if the Bi le were lost, might e tract it from Wesley's hymns. They contain the Bi le in solution. ' Henry Bett has rightly called Charles's hymns mosaics of i lical allusions Wesley selected, shaped and polished Bi le words, phrases and images and cemented them together to form his own image laden works of art. Charles's favorite description for the Bi le was the oracles, a designation which emphasi ed the revelatory impact he felt in the Scriptures. ' It was his per sistent ha it to use the Bi le as the foundation for his religious epistemology Doctrine, creed and reli hence, he also called the Scriptures his rule of faith. i lical standard: to the were all evaluated gious e periences according


20

Tyson

Doctrines, e periences

to

We to the sacred standard

Assured the Can

never

try.

fly. Spirit of our Lord

contradict His Word:

Whate'er His

Spirit speaks

to me.

Must with the written Word agree If not I cast it all aside. As Satan's voice,

or

nature's

The test of truth and

pride.

righteousness,

O God, thy records we confess. And who Thine oracles gainsay.

right celestial way pardon sure they vainly oast.

Have missed the

Their

sunk, in darkness lost they of perfection dream.

In nature

Or if

light of grace is

The

not in them.

Charles Wesley had an unam iguous confidence in the accuracy of the i li cal record, and his doctrine of Scripture had its asis in the revelatory connection etween the Word and Spirit of God. or Charles, the Bi le was the enlivened

Word of God

ecause of its

often than the Bi le itself

pro imity

were

said to

to Christ and the

Spirit and these more revelatory event:

e infalli le in the

Let all who seek in

Jesu'

name.

To Him su mit their every word. Implicit faith in them disclaim.

And send the hearers to their Lord Who doth His ather's will reveal. Our

only Guide

Infalli le.

thy mind impart. own interpreter. the Scriptures to my heart. E plain That when the Church thy servant hear. Taught y the Oracles Divine, They all may own, the Word is Thine. Jesus

to

me

Be thou thine

It

precisely his emphasis upon the revelatory role of the Bi le, e pressed in and Spirit, that gave Wesley's hymns a direction dynamic relation of Word

was

the

essentially i lical, and yet also so fresh and lively. He had an acute ut was unwilling to make the Bi le an end in itself reverence for the Scriptures, that

was so


Transfiguration of Scripture

rather, it

was a

fellowship

Matt. 9:20-21

to reach

means

with Christ

where

a

an

end

such

as

reconciliation, sanctification,

humanitarian service . The following hymn, ased on woman was healed of a hemorrhage y touching the hem or

Jesus' garment , e pressed Charles's reverence for trem le to draw near. , as well as his willingness of

ment with which

21

Scriptures

the to

use

l

the Bi le

lush and

as

to touch my Lord:

a gar

Unclean of life and heart unclean. How shall I in His sight appear I

Conscious of my invertinate sin lush and trem le to draw near

through the garment of His Word hum ly seek to touch my Lord.

Yet I I

The

goal

of Charles

Wesley's

hermeneutic

the actuali ation of the

was

i lical

Blessed is he that readeth, and they that hear... , Charles reminds the reader that the mystic words, illuminated for us y the Holy Spirit Divine Interpreter , ecome the Words that endless liss te t. In his comment

on

Rev. 1:3

impart when Kept in an o ings of the Word are found hearing and doing the Word glory of Christ is revealed

edient heart.

His second stan a

implies

the

less

hearing doing of it, since through our the Kingdom of God comes upon the earth and the in the

oth

now

and

and in the Lord's return:

Come, Divine Interpreter Bring me eyes Thy ook to read. Ears the mystic words to hear.

proceed. impart

Words which did from Thee Words that endless

Kept in an

liss

o edient heart.

All who read, or hear, are less' d. If Thy plain commands we do. Of

Thy kingdom here possess'd. we shall in glory view,

Thee

When Thou

comest

on

Reign triumphant T. S.

Gregory,

in

an

article entitled

at

earth to a ide

Thy side.

Charles

Wesley's Hymns

urges the modern reader to consider Wesley's te t. Alongside of Charles's easy conscience a out

characteristic he shared with

apply sophisticated

and Poems,

hermeneutic in its historical

i lical

con-

supernatural world-view, a the Augustan poets, stand Wesley's attempts to scholarship. He read and applied the leading a


22

Tyson

resources we

of his

imagine

that

day,

however

John Wesley's

anti uarian they may seem today Nor should Notes Upon the Old and New Testaments escaped

Charles's attention, since he edited revised the entire pro ect.' Charles Wesley was also a talented e egete. His study and application of the Bi le was not limited to the renderings of the Authori ed ersion KJ , the Book

of

Common

Prayer or recent commentaries though he utili ed each of those de terity in the Greek New Testament was e emplified in

His

resources.

Charles's treatment of the so-called kenosis passage in Phil. 2:7. The Greek heauton ekenose is, literally, he emptied himself referring to the condescension of Christ. The translators of the Authori ed self of Authori

Wesley

ersion avoided the

old

simplicity

phrasing, reputation, and took upon him the form of a servant. ed reading avoids the scandalous phrasing of the Greek te

the Pauline

and translated the kenosis with the words

The

no

would have

none

of this

of

he made him

t,

ut

type of evasion:

He left His throne a ove. Emptied of all hut love,

Whom the heavens cannot contain, God, vouchsafed a worm to appear.

Poor, and vile, and a ect here. '

rendering of emptied pushed eyond the transla day prefigured the reading carried in more modern ver Revised as the sions such Standard . Having felt the force of Wesley's i licism, also one must press through it to the hermeneutical processes Charles used to e pound Scripture in his hymns and sacred poems. Charles's

old and direct

tions of his

own

and

Approach Wesley's approach

Christocentric Charles

emphatically Christocentric. It egan Jaco wrestling with the angel, the

to the Bi le

mattered not where the passage assault on Jericho, a para le a out

was

Good Samaritan , Charles's e position of it found a christological center and preached full salvation through almost any i lical passage. Wesley's tendency was to evangeli e the Old Testament and Charles treated it as if it were contemporary with the Church of Christ. John a

Wesley's christological approach to the Bi le in mind when he wrote that Charles rarely deals with the primary meaning of Scripture. Instead of paraphrasing or reporting the gist of a i hcal passage, he poetically restructured it according to his own theological agenda. It was precisely this hermeneutical process that distinguished and distanced Charles Wesley from his hymnological precursors. He oldly wove Christology and commentary into to paraphrase the message of a particular every poem instead of simply trying Ratten ury

i lical te t.

had


Transfiguration of Scripture

23

Bar ara Welch, e amining Charles Wesley's poetry from a literary perspec tive, identified his Christocentricism as a characteristic that distinguished

Charles from the

Augustan poets who were his contemporaries, as well as from hymnological precursors like George Her ert and Isaac Watts The Augustan mood meditated upon the wonders of nature in order to contemplate the greatness of God, ... ut in Wesley, that is only holy, it seems, which was raised on the Cross Christ redeemed men, not creation. This ha it in Wesley of envisaging the world almost e clusively from a supernatural as opposed to nat ural viewpoint marks a central difference etween him and that group of fash Bernard Manning, in his classic Hymns of Wesley and Watts, used iona le poets. Christocentricism to contrast the hermeneutics of those two poets of Scripture: Watts, time and time again, set the faith of the incarnation, the passion and res urrection against its cosmic ackground. He surveys the solar system, the planets, the fi ed stars, the animal creation, from the eginning to the end of time. Watts followed the traditional Augustan poetic form in his application of imagery drawn from the natural world to e plain i lical revelation, Wesley refined Augustan diction y structuring his poems around Christ and other leading i li cal themes like redemption, atonement, sanctification and self-giving . Dr. Watts was a pioneer in the art of paraphrasing the Psalms and other i lical passages. His ideal was to follow the i lical te t as closely as possi le and restate Charles its message in the est Miltones ue poetic diction he could muster. term to i even the that is use if weaving appropriate y Wesley paraphrases lical words and images from the passage and from aU across the Scripture, togeth er with e tra- i lical words, phrases and images to form a new interpretative fa ric. Thus, Manning aptly noted that Charles ...not only paraphrased, ut also oldness which he o served in Wesley's work commented as he versified the was found in the poet's willingness to grapple with the i lical te t artistically in order to form it along the lines of one of the Bi le's central themes. Wesley was conscious of his penchant for looking eneath the primary meaning of Scripture. His hymn ased on Luke 9:33 the Transfiguration account gave a clue to its author's recognition of the method he used to transfigure i hcal passages:

his

Who tastes the Truth and Jesus sees In all the Scripture mysteries The Law and the

Prophets' End,

to meditate and many

Dehghts gladly on the mountain stay.

Would

And

The first three lines

are

never more

descend. '

especially significant

for

our

in uiry

since

they point well

to

in Charles's willingness to find Jesus in all the Scripture-mysteries, the Law and the Prophets. Commenting on Luke 1 :31 If they hear not Moses as

as


24

Tyson

and the

one rose

dead.

core

love

Prophets, neither will they e persuaded, though Wesley looked to the New Testament's redemptive alone as the sufficient proof of reconciling grace :

from the

and identified

Taught y their incredulity standing meaning vouchsafed y thee We thankfully em race. The Scriptures search to find our Lord And listen to the oyful Word Of reconciling grace.

The

The sinner poor Thy Word elieves. As full sufficient proof perceives What Thou

are

But love alone But

only Gilead's

The These statements

pleased to 'impart' change the will.

can

alm

can

heal

lindness of my heart.

not antithetical to those introduced

a ove

standing Scriptures to find our ut Charles did not stop his commentary with Christology. He connected Lord, Christology with redemption and sanctification, and generally found the whole gospel in any i lical passage that came under his consideration. Charles Wesley was conscious of his penchant for looking eneath the literal surface of the i lical te t to find the precious mine elow. In the following verse he critici ed the proud and no dou t superficial learning which is meaning

are

of the te t still

una le to discern

even

prods

the

foundational

Proud

singer

to

the

search the

i lical themes: '

learning oasts,

its skill in vain

The sacred oracles to

e plain.

It may the literal surface show. But not the precious mine elow

The

saving

sense

remains conceal' d.

The Book is still unread, unknown. And open'd y the Lam alone. The

verse

is full of

powerful images

shows his clear interest in

the

for

precious

descri ing Charles's

mine

hermeneutic. It

elow, the literal surface of

deposit is descri ed as the saving sense which is revealed y the living Word Christocentricity emerges again, as the Lam opens the Book poetically as its central theme and redemptively as the Spirit opens the saving sense for the reader. Scripture.

The hidden


Transfiguration of Scripture

Typology Typology

is

hermeneutical tool which finds

25

deeper meaning hidden might e pect, it provided Charles Wesley with one of his favorite devices for plum ing the depths of the precious mine elow. His application of typology followed the general pattern of finding a New Testament or christological type lurking ehind an Old Testament person, event or institution. Hence, Jesus was found typified or prefigured in the heroes of old. Charles's typologies were often very direct: Moses the meek man of God, A type of Christ was seen.... Wesley's ournal reports that types also emerged in his preaching, though his sermons now e tant do not employ the device. irtually any Old Testament hero could, in Charles's hands, ecome an instru ment for teaching a out Christ, although Moses, Joshua, Samson and David were his favorite figures for typological identification. The ark of the covenant, to which the Israelites fled for mercy, typified the wounds of Christ. Jaco 's lad der, upon which angels ascended and descended from heaven Gen. 28:12-13 , ecame a powerful image for descri ing the work of Christ's incarnation, death as did Isaac and resurrection, carrying the wood of his own sacrificial death. '' Since 1841 and the pu lication of Thomas Jackson's Life of Charles Wesley, stu dents of Methodism have een ama ed y Charles's application of Matthew ew people, mused Jackson, would think of going to Henry's commentary. At first the ver ose Commentary of Matthew Henry for the elements of poetry. ama ement seems well closer e amination founded glance Jackson's yet sug gests that Charles Wesley and Matthew Henry shared a hermeneutical fondness for christological typologies. This common interest also e plains why Charles repeatedly followed Henry's comments and virtually ignored John Wesley's Notes as he formed his Short Hymns on Select Passages of Scripture. '' Numerous instances emerge where Charles's poems prefer Matthew Henry's comments and even orrow his phraseology instead of following the pattern of John Wesley' Notes. An e ample of this sort of preference is found in their respective treatment of Josh. 20:7-8, where the seven cities of refuge were designated Charles Wesley and Matthew Henry found typological meanings for each of the seven cities, ut John's Notes refused to venture eyond the oundary of Palestinian geography. Charles Wesley used typology e tensively. He understood it as a valid poeti cal device for developing analogical or thematic connections across the road e panse of Scripture. Often his typologies do not seem as grotes ue as others of the age, since Charles took pains to make the element of connection e it meek ness, intercession or victory through death, etc. transparent in his e position. Often he used the Sit -im-Le en of the te t to ridge the gap etween them through identification with their pHght or with their emotions. Typology, while eschewed y John Wesley's more modern type of commentary, formed an o via

eneath the literal surface of the

i lical te t. As

a

we


2

Tyson

ous

corollary

to Charles's Christocentric

meshed well with the

practical

approach

situation of

evangelist who deemed it his task and through any Bi le passage.

a

to the

poet who

to tell the whole

hermeneutical task. It

was

Allegory Allegory is another deeper identification which Wesley's hermeneutic arsenal. Like typology, allegory etween two characters

or

incidents which

on

also

gospel story

a

hymnologisthymn,

in every

appears in Charles makes a connection

the surface of

things

seem

uite

separate. But where typology rests on a strong thematic or sym olic identifica tion etween two seemingly separate elements, allegory speciali es in finding a spiritual identification for virtually every aspect emerging in the passage under

Allegory, like typology, has a long history of application in the always had the inherent danger of the te t eing e tended at the whim of the e positor. This danger ecomes especially acute in allegory as opposed to typology since history is held in a eyance. But for this same rea son, allegory ecomes a particularly versatile tool in the hands of a poetical com eneath the literal sur mentator, who wishes to mine the depths of meaning consideration.

Church yet,

it has

face of the

i lical te t.

Wesley generally used allegory to e pound and e pand New pericopes. It was a prominent literary device in his poems and in his preaching. An unpu lished letter preserves a recollection of how he preached from the para le of the Good Samaritan: Charles

Testament

I read prayers, and preached the pure Gospel from the Good Samaritan. Surely He was in the midst of us, pouring in His oil. Some seemed ready

for Him and it cannot e long efore He inds up their wounds, and rings them into His inn, and takes care of them. He gave money to me the

host, that I their

too

recovery.

This sustained

attention, an

applica le

take

imagery

care

is also

of His

patients.

preserved

I

was

greatly

in Charles's

concerned for

hymn

on

The Good

The Bi le passage Luke 15 had long een the focus of allegorical ut where St. Augustine and other earlier e positors turned the para

Samaritan. le into

might

epic

of Christ's life, Charles

to the inner life of everyone.

Wesley

saw

it

as a

reconciling

event

Wesley's hymn the reader or singer is the wounded traveler, ro ed of true rehgion y thieves. The mortal wound which has een inflicted is Adam's sin: The traveler is stripped Dead in Adam, dead, withui My soul is wholly dead. God. He is of and his lood is his loodied, naked, Naked, helpless stripped The priest who Comes down in vain sym oli ed the patriarchs and own guilt. prophets of old. The Levite of the i hcal account ecomes one of the contempo In

who rary false teachers

offers

no

rehef All my wounds e open

tears.

'

Jesus,


Transfiguration of Scripture

27

the Good Samaritan in

Wesley's e position, is full of grace and compassion He The recovery of the traveler is a recovery from spirit's every wound. sin, through the Wine and oil of grace, at the hand of the Good Physician. ' The result of that healing prescription is not only health, ut also cleansing and wholeness Wesleyan euphememisms for sanctification or Christian Perfection: Perfect then the work egun, And make the sinner whole. Similar allegorical e position can e found in hymns which were ased on Charles's favorite sermon The Pool of Bethesedia,' '' The Woman of te ts, including Blind Bartimaeus, and WrestHng Jaco . Canaan Bi lical events hke, The Taking of Jericho, The Children in the iery urnace ' and Daniel in the Den of Jonah's Gourd, were also Lions, allegori ed into stories of redemption. Seen against his literary conte t, once again Wesley roke with the style of his important precursors. Unlike Bunyan's Pilgrim's Progress, and allegories of an earlier generation, Charles Wesley never narrated the allegori ed account to the reader. The reader or singer is never a spectator to the unfolding redemptive heals my

events rather, we ecome one of the actors in the narrative. We are the Wounded Traveler ro ed of vital piety or Jaco wrestling for the lessing Blind Bartimaeus's affliction

ecomes

Adultery guilty, Wesley's allegories are from those

our own

sinful

lindness and

we are

the

y grace longer Bunyan or Milton Where the Puritans i lical narrate the account, the Methodist makes the singer participate in the drama where earlier allegorists used the device to communicate ideals or princi ples, Charles Wesley used the same tool to take the reader or singer to the core of the i lical passage y recreating the event afresh in the reader's imagination. It with a very few e ceptions, the was for this reason that John Ratten ury found are of Charles convincing, and rarely, as in the Wesley allegorical interpretations case of so many allegorists, grotes ue. ' Wesley took an old tool and reshaped it

Woman Taken in ent

to fit the needs of

ut

a new

no

accused. How differ

of

age.

Drama

image- uilding process at work in Charles Wesley's lended and allegori ed Scripture into a poetic form that communicated the gospel in a dramatic and participatory fashion. His poet ic reconstructions were full of the Bi le, and they communicated a sense of lifee perience which drew the singer into the te t. Wesley had a talent for taking a famihar passage and changing its conte t, or lending it with another passage or image to make it fresh and ahve in the imagination of the reader. or e ample, There is

a

hermeneutic.

mythic

or

He wove,

the mournful call of Matt. 27:25, His lood e upon us, and upon our children, which in its conte t was the shout of the crowd re ecting Christ efore Pilate's udgment seat, ecame in Charles's poetic reconstruction, the est of prayers, if

rightly understood. The redemption through the

shout of dereliction lood

was

transformed into

saving significance

of Christ.

a

prayer for


28

Tyson

Charles's process of

recasting

allusions

or

imagery

into

something

new or

star-

thng, had as its goal recreating a sense of the drama or emotion which drew people into the hymn, and through it to Christian faith. Thus, the hymns, as with Charles's sermons, were weapons of Wesleyan evangehsm they had the not-so-su tle agen da of inviting people to come to vital faith. Charles often undertook this task y making the hearer or singer a contemporary of the crucifi ion of Christ: It is finished The love of Christ crucified so constrained me, that I urst into tears, and felt sympathy with Him in His suffering. In like manner, the whole congregation looked upon Him who they had pierced and mourned.

This

same

preaching,

poetic device,

created

hinted at

through the ournal's hymns:

record of Charles's

dramatic effect in his

a

My stony heart Thy wrath defies. against Thy udgments rise. Self-hardened from Thy fear What can'nst Thou with Thy re el do Try me y love, and in my view With all Thy wounds appear.

And dares

piteous sight can ear hangs leeding there there On yonder tree There,

Ah Who that

Behold the Lam Pierced

are

His

feet. His hands. His side

My Lam , My love

is crucified

O God He dies for me

hymn, like the sermon descri ed in Charles's ournal, vi rates with emotion it peppered with e clamation points, cast in imagery and tense that demands par ticipation in a new religious event orchestrated y the poet. Time and space are not oundaries to poetic imagination or to religious e perience Wesley's hymns used poetic hermeneutics to ridge the distance etween the i lical past and the contemporary reader y involving us in the events and e periences of the te t. Wesley used many poetic devices to create this dramatic dialogue etween The is

the to

past and present.

paint

the

picture

We shall mention

ut

of the crucified Christ

a

few of them. The first method was the canvas of the reader's mind.

on

graphic language. His phrases are short and well cho and they communicate in vivid word sen pictures the The poems are typically set in the emotion. or author's e citement present tense as opposed to the more traditional narrative past this reaks the onds of time, Charles's

verses are

full of

full of color and action

contemporaries of the te t. Second, occasionally, the sense of spiritual need

and makes the readers

or

culpa ility

on

the

part of


Transfiguration of Scripture

29

the reader is

heightened y the spokesperson in Wesley's hymns accepting guilt for the death of Christ: The covenant- lood Underfoot I have trod And again I have murdered the meek Son of God. In this e ample, formed on the pattern of He . : , Wesley personified the seriousness of re ect ing the reconciliation pro-offered in Christ's death. The present re ection of redemption is e uated with the guilt of those who murdered Him in the histori cal past y mythopoeic interpretation those who re ect Christ now also crucify The poetic transition from past to present placed a sense of responsi ility Him. and onus for decision upon the singer of the hymn. As we saw in his application of allegory, Charles's spokespersons often transformed the reader into one of the lame

or

actors in the

A third

raneity

i lical drama.

literary device which Wesley employed to create a sense of contempo hymns was dialogue. In a few of his e positions of the atonement, poetical spokespersons enter into dialogue with Jesus as He hangs

in his

Charles's upon the

ever

present

cross:

Saviour, I with guilty shame. Own that I, alas, am he Weak, and wavering still I am.

Ready still to fly from Thee: Stop me y Thy look, and say, 'Will you also go away '

You, whom I have

rought to God,

Will you turn from God again You, for whom I spilt my lood. You, who felt it once applied.

Can

yet leave my leeding side

No, my Lam , my Saviour, No

Every soul with me reply rom Thy wounds we will not go. Will not from our Master fly: This is the life-giving word Thou art

our

Eternal Lord.

dialogue reaches its clima in the thirteenth verse poetic voice implores, Speak Thyself into our heart. This

ment

and Christian Perfection

were

of this poem, where the

Reconcihation,

wedded in this dramatic

dialogue

atone

with the

crucified Christ. Because of his it in ways

we

for the Bi le, Charles Wesley reworked and applied might term e istential. T. S. Gregory has put it well y

reverence

moderns


30

Tyson

saying

the

that Charles

Wesley

e perience they

ut to induce

wrote his

reveal.

' The

hymns not only to e press, e periential e pression was oth

doctrinal and

didactic. It revolved around the central themes of the Christian faith, and sought to e press those themes in ways that made them live in the reader's frame of ref

Wesley drew the singer into the action and e perience of the i lical te ts rather than narrate the accounts through poetic spokespersons, Wesley made the reader into one of the actors in the drama he was directing. In erence.

Charles's

hymns and poems the i lical te t and the singer stand in an e perien dialogue that makes them contemporaneous. His affirmation of the theologi cal connection of Word and Spirit lay at the foundation of Wesley's sometimes daring hermeneutical reconstructions. It allowed him to find Christ at the center of any passage, and yet gave Charles the freedom to allow the Spirit of God to speak through the passage as he shaped the te t into a new conte t. Ironically, Wesley's traditional conception of the nature of Scripture gave him a hermeneu tic that was far from traditional his transfigurations of Scripture were fresh, live ly and often a it daring. tial

WESLEY'S HERMENEUTIC IN LITERARY CONTE T

Charles's hymns and sacred poems have an Augustan sense of propriety a out them. James Dale and Bar ara Welch have made the literary connections etween Wesley's work and the Augustan poets the foci of their Ph.D. disserta tions.' Dale's summation of Wesley's participation in Augustan poetic form is

representative Charles

of their conclusions:

Wesley

is

an

indu ita le

Augustan

in his controlled

e pression

of

emotion, his unashamed didacticism, his clear precision of statement, his

forceful canon

compression

Dryden, Prior, Wesley's

of

meaning,

his constant allusions to

a

hallowed

of reference familiar to his readers, his diction, cast in the mold of and

Pope.

interaction with

contemporary poetic genre indicates that his hymns

popular piety's picture of a mystical little man who wrote always hymns possess oth spontaneity were tools in the hands of a poetical those ut and overflowing emotion, feelings his sentiment, while genuine, a not was Charles sentimentalist craftsman. merely And we do him a disservice if we think diction. his of instrument was an poetic the the of role of e perience played read we when emotionalism importance The fusion of doctrine and e perience was as sacred and in his hymns poems. as it was method to Charles's to foundational Wesleyan theology it creat poetic doctrine in his and e perience march in Hence ed a lived theology. hymns an indivisi le unit. '' step, forming Welding e perience and theology together in hymns with emotive references asic to Charles's pattern in rehgious verse. His rother, John Wesley, recwas were

studied

more

than

under the heat of emotion. His


Transfiguration of Scripture

31

ogni ed it and his Preface appropriately descri ed their 1780 Hymn Book for the Use of a People Called Methodists: a little ody of e perimental and practical divinity. ' E perimental and practical are good synonymns for the Wesleyan conception of the role of religious e perience. It had to do with the interconnection of life and thought.' John's preface indicated that this fusion of doctrine and vital e perience that was found in the makeup of the hymns even e tended to the organi ation of the hymn ook: The hymns are not um led together, ut carefully ranged under proper heads, according to the e perience of real Christians. ' Thus, Charles's poetical use should not e confused with the geysers of warm feelings found in the Romantic verse that came after him yet, as Donald Davie suggests, eeling is there. We respect its integrity, and we take its force. Just ecause it is not offered in isolation ut together with its occa sion, an occasion grasped and presented with keen and sinewy intelligence. ' There was a Lockean sense of practicality a out the Wesleyan approach to reli gious language hence, John's preface also assured the reader, We talk common sense...

The

hymns ing put

oth in prose and in verse. ' preface hinted at the

same

to

e

good poetry patch up the rhyme,

Wesleys'

since in them

poetry. John found the doggerel, no otches, noth

tastes in

there is

no

e plicatives. Here is nothing turgid meaning. ' A champion of e pression, elieved the words for folks, John Wesleyan hymns possessed oth plain plain the purity, and the strength and elegance of the English language, and at the He same time, the utmost simplicity and plainness, suited to every capacity. also recogni ed the genuine creativity of Charles's muse, distinguishing etween an artist and an imitator: By la our, a man may ecome a tolera le imitator of or Milton, and may heap together pretty compound epi Spencer, Shakespeare thets, as paleeyed, meekeyed, and the like ut unless he e orn a poet, he will never attain the genuine spirit of poetry. ' The similarities etween Charles Wesley's poetry and Augustan form are sus tained and striking. But it is also clear that the literary evaluation of the Augustan or Neo-Classical period is currently undergoing pervasive revision.' ' Donald Wesling's fine survey Augustan orm: Justification and Breakup of a Poetic Style, concludes y suggesting that Augustan orm was actually a poetic artifice created y the emergent Romantics who, wishing to straighten out the logic, re ected or reversed or reinvented y distortion the entire hst of postu lates. So doing, they involved themselves in new pro lematics of a premeditated spontaneity which have not to this day een unraveled.' ' John Sitter o serves this same sort of revisionist tendency y suggesting that the literature of the mid-eighteenth century is more intelHgi ly understood if one avoids the temptation to consider it either Pre-Romantic or late PostAugustan.' Sitter argues that the mid-century poetry is characteri ed y a liter the ary loneliness which sought detachment from contemporary history through or

in to

om astic... no cant

no

no

fee le

words without


32

Tyson

creation of

alternative

an

in the

history.

This recreation

or

conversion

of

history,

apparent graveyard poets of the 1740s Thomas Gray, Thomas Wharton and Edward Young marked an assimilation of romantic-type material into Augustan orm.' David Morris detects a similar sort of fusion of poetic styles most

occurring

earlier c. 1700 in the

writings of the literary critic and poet, John only religious poetry, he also pu lished several impor tant contri utions to poetical theory. The significance of these ooks is found in Dennis's growing appreciation for the role of personal e perience or passion in poetry Poetry he elieved, is 'an Art, y which a poet e cites Passion'. ' The significance of this literary conte t for Charles Wesley's poetical hermeneutic is clear: Wesley, like a few of his contemporaries, stood on the rink of a literary revolution that erupted in the poetry of the middle of the eighteenth century. He continued the poetic diction, inherited from Dryden, Pope and Prior, that emphasi ed classical forms and pure meaning and yet, like his fellow mid-century poets, Wesley sought to convert or transfigure history y creating an alternative history y the use of passion. In Charles's poems, i lical his was tory transfigured into a contemporary e perience which drew the reader or into the core of the i lical event.' singer Dennis.'

even

Dennis not

wrote

CONCLUSION

Wesley's hymns and sacred poems are mosaics of i lical phrases They are constructed with the care and attention of a man who was oth a gifted classicist and a Methodist evangelist. His poetic hermeneutic was characteri ed y a persistent christological focus. It utili ed typology and allegory, along with less standard devices, to set the message of faith and com fort in the life e perience of the singer or reader. Wesley had a rather traditional conception of the nature of the Bi le, and yet his penchant for turning i lical te ts into poetic dramas recreated those same passages in startling ways. Charles's hermeneutic also showed that he stood on the cutting edge of an important literary movement that shook the mid-eigh teenth century. Using a diction that was i lical and yet uni uely his own, Wesley sought to transfigure the Bi le and contemporary history y setting them in an e periential dialogue. In his hymns, the i lical past and the eighteenth-century present stood together in a sort of eucharistic timelessness which set Christ efore the reader or singer, and which made the gospel past into a contemporary e perience. Charles

and allusions.


Transfiguration of Scripture

APPENDI

33

A

BIBLICAL ALLUSIONS IN CHARLES WESLEY'S HYMN O 1. O for

thousand

a

or A Thousand

tongues

to

Redeemer's

sing

My great praise. The glories of my God and King, The triumphs of His grace.

Tongues

to

Sing ' '

A.

Acts 2:11 Phil. 2:11

B.

Luke 24:21 Isa.53:10f

C D. E od. 15:1-3 Luke 9:33 2 Cor. 2:14 Ps. 145:1

2.

My gracious Master and my God me to proclaim To spread through all the world

A.

Luke 4:22

Assist

B.

Isa.

C.

The honors of

D.

Mark 1:28 I Thess. 1:8 Matt. 9:31 Ps. :2

A.

Greek for

B.

Tis music in the sinner's ears,

John

C.

Luke 15:25

Tis life and health and peace.

D.

John 1:4

ALL:

Isa.

a road

3.

Jesus the ids

And

4. He

Thy

name

that charms

our sorrows

speaks

and

The mournful,

fears.

His voice.

elieve.

prisoner free

His

lood

His

lood availed for

can

Ps.

42:11 Eph. 2:11

1:lf Matt.

Luke 4:18

re oice.

reaks the power of canceled sin

He sets the

grace.

1 :20

receive.

roken hearts

The hum le poor

our

cease

listening to

New life the dead

5. He

name.

1:1-2

make the foulest clean me.

A B. Rom. 7 C. D.

He . 9:14 James 5:1

8 esp. Rom. 7:14 8:11 I Tim. 1:15

Gal. 2:20


34

Tyson

APPENDI

B

A HERMENEUTICAL COMPARISON'

Bi lical Te t

Josh. Josh. Josh. Josh. Josh.

Judg. Judg. Judg. Jo Jo Jo

10:2

10:40 11:18 11:21 11:23

15:14

1 :29 1 :29

9:21 12:2 13:15

Jo 33:24 Jo 42:8 Psa. 42:2 Psa. 118:18

C.

Matthew Henry

Wesley'

No

Yes

Yes

No

No

Yes

No

Yes

No

Yes

No

No

No

Yes

No

No

No

Anti-Arian

No

No

Chastening Blessing

No

No

Jesus Jesus Jesus Jesus Jesus Samson Jesus

Suffering

of Saints

Suffering

of Saints

Jesus

Samson

Yes

No

Chrisf s Intercession

Yes

No

Calvary Chastening

Yes

No

Ransom

-

Jesus

ont of

Psa. 119:9 Isa. 3 :7

Altar

2:13

ech. 12:8

Wesley'

Yes

Joshua Joshua Joshua Joshua Joshua

Christian Perfection

Jer.

I.

Christ

No

No

No

Yes

No

No

On dou le sin

No

No

Angel

Yes

Yes

The

Jesus

Mai. 1:8

Inward Sacrifices

Yes

No

Matt 2:11

Gifts

sym ols

No

No

lood

Yes

No

T5 es

No

No

John

5:2

Acts 7:8

Pool

are

Jesus'

OT heroes


Transfiguration of Scripture

APPENDI

1. Woe is me what

My

tongue

can

C: THE GOOD SAMARITAN

tell

sad afflicted state

allen among thieves I am. they have ro 'd me of my God, Turn'd my glory into shame. And

me

in my

lood.

was once my glorious dress. And I like Him did shine,

Hath

spoil'd

righteousness

this soul of mine

the mortal wound of sin, 'Twi t God and me the parting made:

By

Dead in ADAM, dead within. My soul is wholly dead. 3. 1 have lost the life Divine,

And when this outward To the Giver I

reath

resign.

Must die the second

death.

Naked, helpless, stripped of God, And at the latest gasp I lie: Who eholds me in my lood. And

save me ere

4. Lo the PRIEST

And

I die

comes

down in vain.

my sad distress Sees the state of fallen man sees

But cannot

give prophets

me ease:

Patriarchs nd

old

O serve my wretched, desperate case Me e piring they ehold. But leave

me as

I

was.

Looks

me

me, and

on

But offers

espies. grief.

to view my

stops

ids

me

rise.

relief.

no

All my wounds he open tears. And searches them, alas in vain

anguish, griefs, in my pain.

ill'd with He leaves

2. God

Satan of His

5. Lo the LE ITE

And

Who my anguish can reveal. Or all my woe relate

And left

35

and fears.

me

. O Thou GOOD SAMARITAN, In Thee is all my hope Only Thou cans't succour man.

And raise the fallen up. Hearken to my dying cry.

My wounds compassionately Me a sinner pass not y. Who gasp for help to Thee.

ourney' St where I Thy owels move

7. Still thou

And still

Pity is

Thy

to

And let

a

heart is love.

poor sinner, stoop.

Thy healing

Heal my

grace a ound ind up

ruises, and

My spirit's

every wound.

8. Saviour of my soul draw In mercy haste to me At the

point

And cannot Now

am

with Thee the same.

And all

Stoop

see.

nigh.

of death I lie. to Thee.

come

Thy kind relief afford.

The wine and oil of grace pour in Good Physician, speak the word.

And heal my soul of sin.


3

Tyson

Pity to my dying cries Hath drawn Thee from a

9.

11. Perfect then the work

ove.

Hovering over me with eyes

Thy will on me My ody, spirit, soul.

All

Of tenderness and love:

Now, e'en

now

Thou has saved And 10.

I

see

Thy face.

alm of GILEAD I receive

The

y Thy grace.

me

ade the sinner live.

Surely now the

egun.

whole e done.

And make the sinner

Still preserve me safe from harms And kindly for Thy patient care

Take me, Jesu to Thine arms. And keep me ever there.

itterness

Of second death is past: O my Life, my Righteousness,

On Thee my soul is cast. Thou has rought me to Thine inn. And I am of thy promise sure Thou shall cleanse

me

And all my sickness

from all sin.

cure.

NOTES 1

.

This article had its

inception

as a

presentation

to the

Society

of

John Wesley ellows,

at

their annual conference, Shakertown, Kentucky, Christmas, 1985. 1 am grateful to the soci for their support and encouragement in my research. ety and to Dr. Ed Ro

Ordinations, where Charles's unpu lished letter To Dr. Chandler headed, London, April, 28th., 1785, descri ed the eginnings of the Holy Clu in this way:

2. Cf. Ms.

College I lost in diversions. The ne t I set myself to study. Diligence thinking. I went to the weekly sacrament, and persuaded two or three young scholars to accompany me, and to o serve the method of study pre scri ed y the statutes of the University. This gained me the harmless nickname of My led

a

first year at

me

to serious

'Methodist.'

some de ate as to whether Charles was literally the first Methodist. rederick elieves he was Charles Wesley the irst Methodist London: Epworth Press, 19 4 Richard Heit enrater The Elusive Mr. Wesley Nashville: A ingdon, 1984 , 2:20 dou ts that was the case. It is clear that Charles's recollection, at a distance of nearly si ty years, locates himself at the head of the Holy Clu at its inception cf. Letter to William Chandler . Perhaps more important than determining who was the first Methodist, is the task of e amining and replicating the piety and function of the Holy Clu . or the full te t of Charles's Letter to William Chandler cf. John R. Tyson, Charles Wesley: A Reader London: O ford University Press, 1989 , pp. 58- 1.

There is

Gill


Transfiguration of Scripture

37

3. Gill The

irst Methodist, p. 3 . Journal, 1:155. 5. rank Baker, Charles Wesley as Revealed y His Letters London: Epworth Press, 1948 , p. 35, reports that Charles's sermon Awake, Thou That Sleepest, headed the est-seller list

4. C. W.

among Methodist pu lications during the Wesleys' life time. . The te t of Charles's sermon Awake, Thou That Sleepest

is carried in J. W. Works, 5:25-37 the sermon The Cause and Cure of Earth uakes, 129 located in J. W. Works, 7:38 -400, shows such strong similarity to Charles's Hymns Occasioned y the Earth uake 2 collections, 1750 that it should pro a ly e traced to his pen.

Al in, Charles Wesley's Earliest Evangelical Sermons, Methodist History, 21 Octo er 1982 : 0- 3, gives an account of the discovery of these sermons-a process in

7. Thomas

which Al in and the present writer played a part. These sermons have recently een pu lished y Thomas Al in and Oliver Beckerlegge, Charles Wesley's Earliest Evangelical Sermons

8. C. W.

Wesley Historical Society, 1987 .

Journal,

9. One of these

1:132.

While Midnight Shades the Earth O'erspread, which was su se uent ly pu lished in the Wesleys' Hymns and Sacred Poems 1739 . Cf. Tyson, Reader, pp. 4- . lO.C.W. ournfl , 1:90-98. was

I id., p. 94. I id., p. 95. 13. John R. Tyson and Douglas Lister, Charles Wesley Pastor: A Glimpse Inside His Shorthand Journal, uarterly Review, 4 Spring 1984 :9-22. 14. C. W. Journal, 1:131 134 138 139 140 141 142 145 14 2:214. 150 154 1 15. Thomas Jackson, A Life of Charles Wesley, London: John Mason, 1892 ,1:332. 1 . Cf. Charles's Preface to the 17 2 Short Hymns on Select Passages of Scripture, Poetical Works, 9:vii- and C. W. Journal, 2:91. 17. rank Baker, Representative erse of Charles Wesley London: Epworth Press, 19 2 , p. i. The estimate of the num er of Charles's compositions could run as low as ,000 if one e cludes the lyric poems which were rarely if ever sung. Baker's estimate of 9,000 com positions is slightly higher than the traditional ascription compare J. E. Ratten ury, The Evangelical Doctrines of Charles Wesley's Hymns London: Epworth, 1948 , p. 19-20, which suggests 7,300 as an apt count . But recent documentary evidence supports Baker's larger estimate, and in fact suggests that 9,000 may e a rather conservative figure. Other critical 11.

12.

Wesley from those of his roth given the matter of identifica tion thorough treatment in my Ph.D. dissertation, Charles Wesley's Theology of the Cross: An E amination of the Theology and Method of Charles Wesley as seen in his Doctrine of the Atonement Drew University, Madison, NJ, 1983 . Cf. Baker Representative erse, pp. Iviii-l i. These hymns are eing pu lished y Oliver Beckerlegge and S.T. Kim rough under the title The Unpu lished Poetry of Charles Wesley A ingdon: issues like the er,

distinguishing the compositions

John also have rather direct earing

Kings wood

Books .

on

of Charles

this count. I have

te t of 3,491 of these Short Hymns. Nearly two manuscript form. 19. The English Augustan period came to flower during the reign of ueen Anne. It received that designation ecause of its literary similarity to the golden age of Latin verse. The parameters of the period are often set with the work of John Dryden 1 0 and

18. Poetical

thousand

Works, vols. 9-13 carry the

more

of them remain in


38

Tyson

Samuel Johnson 1780 . Cf. Emilie Legouis and Louis Ca amain, A History of English Literature New York: MacMillian, revised 1957 , pp. 90-870 Hugh Holman, Hand ook of Literature IndianapoHs: Bo s-Merrill, 1980 , pp. 83-84. Yet, as we shall see elow, these oundaries are a matter of convenience and recent literature has reopened the whole dis cussion of Augustan form.

Henry Bett, The Hymns of Methodism London: Epworth Press, 1913 remains the stan pu Hshed source on these literary allusions in Charles Wesley's verse. James Dale, in his unpu lished Ph.D. dissertation, The Theological and Literary ualities of the Poetry of Charles Wesley in Relation to the Standards of His Age Cam ridge, 19 0 , treats this matter well. Bar ara Welch's unpu lished Ph.D. dissertation, Charles Wesley and the Cele rations of Evangelical E perience, locates Wesley's poetry s uarely within the Augustan literary milieu University of Michigan, 1971 . Donald Davie, The Purity of English Diction London: Chatto and Windrus, 1952 , pp. 70-82, also offers a helpful dis cussion of the same topic. 21. Baker, Charles Wesley Letters, pp. 129-142 Cf. Dale, Literary uaHties, p. 127ff. 22. James William Johnson, The ormation of English Neo-Classical Thought Princeton: Princeton University Press, 19 7 , p. 87. Johnson gives an e cellent survey of the various segments of classical literature applied in the Augustan period: Greek Anti uity, pp. 990 Roman Anti uity, pp. 91-105 and Christian Anti uity, pp. 10 -121. 23. Bett, Hymns of Methodism, pp. 124-127. 24. John E. Ratten ury, Evangelical Doctrines, p. 47. 25. Johnson, Neo-Classical Thought, pp. 107-115 Bett, Hymns of Methodism, pp. 98-107. The most o vious Anglican resource which appears in Charles's hymns is the Book of Common Prayer cf. Poetical Works, 9:284-293 where many of his Short Hymns are ased on the Prayer Book ersion. 2 . Davie, Purity of English Diction, pp. 70-81, see chap. 5, The Classicism of Charles Wesley, where Davie demolishes the wall etween lyrical or secular and didactic religious poetry and sets Wesley's verse in its larger literary conte t. 27. I id., p. 77. Davie pointed to Charles's application of words like seer, signify, canceled and meritorious, as e amples of Wesley's remaking collo uial words with 20.

dard

their classical root in mind.

Tyson, Charles Wesley's Theology of the Cross, pp. 94-10 17 -180. Ratten ury, Evangelical Doctrines, p. 48. 30. Cf. Appendi A, for an e ample of this mosaic-making process as e emplified i lical allusions ehind Charles's O or a Thousand Tongues to Sing. 28.

29.

31. Poetical

in the

Works, 12:411, 2934, 9:380, 1074.

32. I id. 33. I id., 9:380,

34. I id., 13:183,

1074 cf. 10:24-25, 1314. 3372.

35. I id., 10:224-225, 3 . I id., 13:219.

21 .

37. T. S. Gregory, Charles Wesley's Hymns and Poems, London uarterly and Hol orn Review, 182 1957 :255. 38. Poetical Works, 7:204, 9:vii C. W. Journal, 1:285. 39. Nehemiah Curnock, ed. The Journal of John Wesley London: Epworth Press, 1938 , 4:3 1, discusses Charles's editorial role in the preparation of John's Notes E planatory


Transfiguration of Scripture

Notes

Upon

the New Testament

commentary The

poetical

San

ransico: E. Thomas, n.d. . A few echoes of John's Short Hymns on Select Passages of

e heard in Charles's

can

39

treatment of Gal. 5:21 is

Scripture.

good e ample

compare Poetical Works, 13:7 , 31 3, with Notes, p. 485. In Charles's poem and John's Notes the phrase weaker and weaker predominates the commentary. Cf. Poetical Works, 13: 0 and Notes, p. 471. a

Hymns of Methodism, p. 81. Works, 1:148, a hymn which Charles called Hymn recent hymnals have shortened it and name it y the first line, 42. Ratten ury, Evangelical Doctrines, p. 92.

40. Bett,

41. Poetical

on

the Titles of Christ. More

Arise

My Soul, Arise.

43. I id.

44. Bar ara

113-114.

Welch, Charles Wesley and the Cele rations of EvangeHcal E perience, pp.

45. I id.

4 . Bemard

Maiming, The Hymns of Wesley and Watts London: Epworth Press, 1943 , pp. 42-43. lew, The Hymns of Charles Wesley: A Study in Their Structure London: Epworth Press, 1953 , p. 0. 48. Manning, Hymns of Wesley and Watts, pp. 42-43. 47. I id. Cf. R. Newton

49. Poetical

Works, 11:184, 1330.

50. I id., 11:248, 14 3. 51. I id., 9:395-39 . 52. I id., 12:1 5, 2441 cf... 53. C. W. Journal, . 71, 77.

Works, 9:35, 42, 43, 4 , 50, 51, 75-7 , 119, 121, 12 , 139, I id., :412, 7. 5 . I id., 9:27, 8 cf... 57. I id., 11:299, 1570. 58. lackson. Life of Charles Wesley, 2:199f. 54. Poetical

142.

55.

59. A. Kingsley Lloyd, Charles Wesley's De t to Matthew Henry, London uarterly and Hol orn Review, 171 194 :334-335 and Erik Routley, Charles Wesley and Matthew Henry, The Congregational uarterly, 33 1955 :345-351. Both authors identify Charles's

hermeneutical posture as the asis of his appreciation for Matthew Henry's comments. Appendi B offers a comparison of twentyfour i lical te ts e pounded y the Wesleys and Henry. At least seventeen of those passages received typological interpretation from Charles Wesley Henry used typology in eleven of the same passages whereas lohn Wesley gave only two comments that ear any resem lance to typological interpretation. 0. Compare Poetical Works, 9:128-129, with Matthew Henry's Concise Commentary Chicago: Moody Press, n.d. , p. 193, and contrast with lohn Wesley's Notes, 1:744. 1. Dale, Literary uaHties, pp. 70-74. 2. Baker, Charles Wesley Letters, p. 39. 3. Poetical Works, 2:15 -158. This hymn is given in its entirety in Appendi C. 4.

I id., 2:15 , I id., . 2. . I id., . 3.

v.

1.

5.

7. I id. 8. 9.

I id., pp. 15 -157, I id., p. 157, v. 5.

v.

4.


40

Tyson

70.

I id., . . I id., p. 158,

71.

.

8.

72. I id.

73. 74.

75. 7 .

Compare Poetical Compare Poetical Compare Poetical Compare Poetical

77. Poetical

Works, Works, Works, Works,

Works, 5:44f.

4:378f with C. W.

Journal, 1:208. lournal, 1:294. 2:150 and C. W. lournal, 2:185. 2:173ff and C. W. Journal, 2:278. 2:153ff with C. W.

78. I id., 5:190f. 79. I id., 2:2 7f. 80.

I id., 2:2

81.

Ratten ury, Evangelical Doctrines, p. Dale, Literary ualities, p. 185.

82.

f.

Journal, AIO. I id., p. 271. 85. Poetical Works, 5:2-3 Cf. 7:335, 3 8 . I id., 4: 3 7 cf. :422, 1357 12:8 . 87. I id., 5:13-14.

93.

83. C.W.

84.

8:143, 9 10: 3 , 1342 9:388, 1095.

88. I id.

Gregory, Wesley's Hymns and Poems, p. 2 1. lames Dale, The Theological and Literary ualities of the Poetry of Charles Wesley in Relation to the Standards of His Age, impu lished Ph.D. dissertation Cam ridge University, England, 19 0 . Bar ara Ann Welch, Charles Wesley and the Cele rations of Evangelical E perience, an impu lished Ph.D. dissertation, University of Michigan, Ann Ar or, 1971 . 91. Dale, Literary uaHties, p. 149. 92. A. S. Gregory, Praises With Understanding London: Epworth Press, 193 , p. 7 cf. Ratten ury, Evangelical Doctrines, pp. 10 -107. 89.

90.

93.

L

W.

Works, 14:340.

E perience in the Thought of lohn Wesley, The American e . 1983 :12-30, points to a Lockian sort of empiricism at work in lohn Wesley's understanding of religious e perience. Donald Green, Augustinianism and Empiricism: A Note on Eighteenth Century English Intellectual History, Eighteenth Century Studies, 1 19 7 :33- 8, sees a similar synthesis of practical e perience and intellec tual in uiry at work in many of Charles Wesley's poetical contemporaries. 94.

rederick

Dreyer,

aith and

Historical Review, 88

95.

1.

W.

Works, 14:340.

9 . Davie, Purity of Diction, p. 79. 97. L W. Works, 14:341. 98. I id.

99. I id. 100. I id.

101. lames Sutherland, A Preface to Eighteenth Century Poetry London: O ford University Press, 1948 , and Josephine Miles, Eras and Modes in English Poetry Berkley: University of CaHfornia Press, 19 4 , represent the older scholarly consensus a out the e istence of a rather standard Augustan orm. John Butt, The Augustan Age London: Hutchinson University Press, 19 5 Ralph Cohen, The Augustan Mode, Eighteenth Century Studies, 1

19 7-1 9 8 :3-32 Northrop

rye,

Towards

Defining an Age

of

Sensi ility, English Literary


Transfiguration of Scripture

41

History, 23 195 :144-152 Donald Green, Augustanism and Empiricism, Eighteenth Century Studies, 1 19 7-19 8 :33-38 David Morris, The Religious Su lime, Le ington: University of Kentucky Press, 1972 C. J. Rawson, Order and Misrule: Eighteenth Century Literature in the 1770's, English Literary History, 42 1975 :471-505 John Sitter Literary loneliness in Mid-Eighteenth Century England Ithaca and London: Cornell University Press, 1982 and Donald Wesling, Augustan orm: Justification and Breakup of a Period orm, Te as Studies in Literature and Language, 22 all 1980 :394-428, each urge a ree amination of the Augustan period and offer suggestions for rethinking Augustan form. 102. Donald Wesling, Augustan orm, p. 422. 103. John Sitter, Literary Loneliness, p. 79f. 104. I id.

105. David Morris, The 10 . Remarks

Modern

Religious Su lime, p.

Poetry

John Dennis.

Religious Su lime, ulgar passion and

107. Morris, The

Ordinary

47f.

Book Entitled Prince Author 1 9 , The Advancement and Refutation of 1701 , and The Grounds of Criticism in Poetry, 1704 were all written y

on a

or

p. 48. Dennis goes on to distinguish etween Enthusiastic Passion. The former was direct and

immediate sensation, whereas the latter resulted from ideas which matured and were complicated through meditation. Morris suggests that Dennis' distinction may have een orrowed from

John Locke's discrimination etween

sensation and reflection

as resources

knowledge 108. Thus it is not so surprising that Charles Wesley had almost un ounded admiration for the Night Thoughts of Edward Young: No more writings ut the inspired are most useful to me, he wrote of them. Young and Wesley were contemporaneous religious poets who oth used passion melancholy and religious e perience to defend and revi tali e classical Christianity. Cf. John R. Tyson, Charles Wesley and Edward Young, Methodist History, 27 January 1989 :110-119. 109. Adapted from John W. Waterhouse, The Bi le in Charles Wesley's Hymns London: Epworth Press, 1957 . ive of Charles's original eighteen verses are given here as an e ample of the way he wove i hcal phrases and allusions into a poetical fa ric of his own design110. In this schemata, Charles Wesley's poetic e position of the i hcal passage was used as the standard of comparison. In the ad oining columns the uestion was asked whether or not Matthew Henry and lohn Wesley, in their respective commentaries, conformed to cf. pp. 49-50 .

for human

the hermeneutical

sideration Short 111.

were

Hymns

pattern found

selected

on

112 Matthew

verse.

Passages of Scripture. Wesley's Short Hymns on

Select

rom Charles

Works, vols. 9-13.

in Charles's

Henry,

An

The

ecause of the rather curious

E position of

e

Select

i lical passages chosen for con position Charles gave them in his

Passages

of

Scripture,

Poetical

the Old and New Testaments New York: Towar and

Hogan, n.d., first edition pu Ushed in 1710, in England . 113 lohn Wesley, E planatory Notes on the Old and New Testaments New York: Carlton Lanahan, n.d., repr. Salem, Ohio: Schmul, 197 .



The Miracle of Atheism

Laurence W. Wood

Contemporary forms of atheism among analytic philosophers are rooted largely in the skeptical writings of David Hume and his empiricism. During the Scottish Enlightenment in the eighteenth century, Hume recom mended that any claims to knowledge a out the world, God and the self which

were

not

ased

flames ' This attack foundation for the

on

on sensory e perience should e committed to the traditional metaphysics was intended to destroy the

proofs for God's e istence. empiricism formed the asis for the rise of a new philosophy known first as logical positivism and later called logical empiricism. It first emerged during the years following World War I from a group of e -scien tists turned philosophers who were located in ienna, Austria. The influ ence of these e -scientists philosophers uickly spread throughout Britain and America, primarily through the writings of A. . Ayer and Rudolf Carnap.' Their methods limited the scope of philosophy to logical analysis. More specifically, philosophy was defined strictly as the logic of science. Only empirical statements supported y the scientific method could form the asis for meaningful, factual statements. This meant the re ection of tradi tional theism in particular ecause it could not e confirmed or disconfirmed y appealing directly to sensory e perience. Ayer called this sensory test of truth the verification principle. Hume's

Laurence W. Wood is

rank Paul Morris

Seminary.

The As ury Theological Journal

Professor of Systematic Theology at As ury Theological

ol. 47 No. 2

all 1992


44

Wood

It is now well known that logical en piricism self-destructed. or it ecame o vious that the verification principle itself was self-contradictory ecause it could neither e confirmed nor disconfirmed as a theory it was not su ect to

e perience. To e sure, the logical empiricists recogni ed this difficulty y inconsistently allowing for an e ception to their own premise.' It also destroyed the asis for ethical theory, reducing all moral udgements to mere sentiment. The logical empiricist's claim that all ethics is a matter of mere emo tion is an a solute ethical udgment itself and can for that very reason e dis missed as mere emotion according to its own principle. These two difficulties in themselves were enough to make the logical empiri cist's criterion of truth pro lematic, ut the fatal flaw to logical empiricism was e posed when it was reali ed that oth science and history were also under mined, since oth disciplines made statements a out things which could not e directly e perienced. After all, the mission of logical empiricism was to free the world of pretentious metaphysics, superstition, and religious eliefs. Its simulta neous and unintended destruction of scientific and historical knowledge was too much. Australian philosopher John Passmore notes: Throw metaphysics into sensory

the fire, and science goes with it, preserve science from the flames and meta physics comes creeping ack.

Empiricist J. L. Mackie re ected logical positivism ecause, this theory of meaning is itself highly implausi le. It is well known that the adoption of it would similarly create serious difficulties for the meaning of many ordinary statements, including all those a out past, historical events, or a out the minds, thoughts and feelings of persons other than oneself. Though philosophically logical empiricism self-destructed, it continues in a modified form today among many Anglo-American philosophers as a asis for refuting traditional theism. The atheism of I. L. Mackie is typical. He was a read er in Philosophy at O ford University and fellow of University College, O ford, prior to his death in 1981. Our purpose here will e to e amine some of the criti cal points raised against traditional theism. Special attention will e given to Mackie. A careful consideration of his atheistic perspective is deserving for at least three

reasons.

y many as representative of the most persua Anglo-American philosophy. Toward the end of life, Mackie developed his most complete statement on religious atheism in ook. The Miracle of Theism, which was pu lished posthumously. Kai Nielsen, irst, J. L. Mackie is considered

sive form of atheism found in

his his

who is also is

one

point

of view

century, says that this ook the most, distinguished articulation of an atheistic in the twentieth century.

of the most articulate atheists in this

one of the most,

given

pro a ly

Second, his thinking is mainly rooted in the arguments of David Hume, who is the patron saint of most contemporary Anglo-American atheists. We will thus engage the

thinking of

oth Hume and Mackie in assessuig the evidence for ehef in God.


The Miracle

of Atheism

45

Third, Mackie e tends the thinking of the skeptical David Hume into

lown atheism. David Hume nowhere his attack

largely

directly

em raced atheism. The

a

full

runt of

upon the dogmatic proofs for God's e istence widely assumed in the deistic thinking of his time. He also attacked the foundation of Christian faith in miracles. Hume at least allowed for the possi le e istence of was

ased upon the design argument, and he was outraged with the dogmatic atheism of the rench materialists.' Mackie transforms the skepticism of Hume into a dogmatic form of atheism. Whereas Hume said that the claims for

God

Christian faith cannot

e

reasona ly supported in matters of fact, Mackie says supported. Whereas Hume said sense that no right-thinking per

any concept of God cannot e reasona ly Christian faith is a miracle in the pe orative son

should

e a le to em race it

ecause of insufficient evidence, Mackie

e tends this argument to include any claim for elief in God. Hence the title of Mackie' s ook. The Miracle of Theism. I shall argue, in contrast, that atheism is a miracle in Hume's sense of eing irrational ecause the evidence for elief in God is there for anyone who wills to know it. One further comment a out the importance of of atheism. Michael Novak o serves that the

considering Mackie' s defense ma ority of intellectual people,

especially scientists, artists, and professors in the United States, are atheists.' are morally o ligated to consider and understand the reasons why thoughtful people em race atheism if they are to engage in meaningful dia logue with current thinking. Christian theists

IS GOD-TALK INTELLIGIBLE

Unlike

some

contemporary atheists,

Mackie affirms the

intelligi ility

of the

traditional concept of God as a personal eing who is transcendent, creator of all things, free to act with intention, omnipotent omniscient, perfect in goodness and

worthy

of

worship.

He thinks that the

contemporary theistic philosopher,

Richard Swin urne, has shown that the logic of traditional religious language is une uivocal, unam iguous and perfectly clear. Nonetheless, Mackie rightly

convincing evidence. not God really e ists is of the not determined simply the religious language. Of logic y course, if religious language is incoherent then it hardly could e affirmed that God actually e ists. But the coherence of theistic language and the actuahty of God's e istence are logically distinct uestions.' Mackie understanda ly e cludes any discussion of non-traditional theists. This neglect is not appreciated especially y process theologians. Daniel Day Williams complains that philosophical critics of theism snu process theology. He writes: The entire discussion a out rehgious language has gone on as if the only conception of God which can e offered is that of traditional Christian the ism especially in the form it takes in Anglican orthodo y.' points

out that

logical

coherence is not in itself

Swin urne likewise affirms the

point. uestion of

same

Whether

or


4

Wood

Mackie clearly e plains the reason for this omission in his reference to process theologian, Paul Tillich. If the concept of God e cludes the notion of personality and

not

self-consciousness,

only indisputa le

most

a out, then

not

then such talk a out God is ut uninteresting. If God is

even

so watered down

as

to

e

simply whatever you care St. Anselm's fool will deny that God e ists. But so

easy a victory is not worth winning. idea of self-consciousness is it worth

'' Only if de ating.

a

definition of God includes the

IS GOD-TALK SENSIBLE

Granted that the main affirmations of theism that

only arguments

traditional theism.'

are

coherent, Mackie

eheved

rooted in sensory e perience will decide the truthfulness of He re ected the earlier logical positivism and em raced a

weak verificationist view, that all our terms have to e given meaning y their is some statements that are verifia le or confirma le in our e perience. '

use

This weakened form of

logical empiricism still assumes that all knowledge is ordinary sensory e perience. or e ample, even if we cannot verify the statement, It was raining an hour ago, Mackie says we still can accept it as a meaningful statement since it is grounded in ordinary sensory e perience.' Mackie's weakened version of the verificationist theory of meaning still e cludes the possi ility that God e ists unless God is known to us directly through our sensory e perience. Unless one can physically see, hear, smell, touch, or taste directly for oneself the evidence for the reality of God, then we have no rational asis for elieving. This is why one contemporary atheisL Kai Nielsen, frankly says only an anthropomorphic theism is rationally coherent, while the developed concept of God in Judeo-Christian tradition is incoherent.'' Why Because the God of Christian theology transcends the world and is not lit erally another finite eing alongside other eings in the world. Because of this, God cannot e literally sensed God is Spirit John 4:24 , not an o ect capa le of eing put inside a scientific la oratory. Since he cannot thus e verified in our sensory or sensi le e perience, not even a weak verificationist theory of mean ing will allow that he could possi ly e ist. It is apparent that Mackie and Nielsen is still shackled y the earlier logical empiricism which assumed that all statements of fact must e verified through our own five senses. It is thus diffi cult, if not unintelligi le, to take Mackie seriously when he concedes that tra ditional religious language is coherent. rooted in

It is understanda le that Mackie e cludes historical ases for

elief

considering

revelations, tradition and

his Humean

empiricism.' He philosophical gives arguments for God's e istence the ontological, cosmological, teleological and moral argu ments. The focus of our attention, however, will not e upon his criti ue of these arguments. As insightful and convincing as the philosophical theistic arguments are, as numerous contemporary philosophers of religion have demonstrated common

thus

certainties

as

considera le attention to the traditional


The Miracle

of Atheism

47

iMascall, Hick, S sin ume, Kiing, Plantinga, Pannen erg , and despite Mackie's evaluation of them, we will not focus upon them ecause they are not

negative

the fundamental

reasons

weak verificationist

of

ehe ang

meaning

in the God of Christian faith. Besides, his has already e cluded the success of these

efore he e amines them. His

argrunents

even

possi ility has egun

of pro Jlg or God is

makes the e tensive

five

for

theory

epistemic presupposition really altogether unnecessary-. The God has een eliminated even efore the argumentation not a sensi le fact, i.e., not an o ser 'a le fact through our

argumentation

in his treatise

senses.

Mackie's verificationist

weakened version of

theory desery es at least two other criticisms. irst, his logical empiricism is self-refuting. Like the logical empiri

cists, he insists that factual

e perience. -' has

ever

Yet the

ing

This

sensed it

statements must

e

verifia le

or

confirma le in

our

theory

may e logically coherent as an a stract idea, ut vho That is, you can't touch, feel, taste, hear or smell this theor

theor ' re uires

that any claim to truth must e sensed What is surpris even consider this self-contradiction which often was

is that Mackie does not

logical empiricists. philosopher, Bertrand Russell, also em raced Humean He this dilemma. He recogni ed that this theory of acknowledged empiricism. asis for all claims to knowledge could not e rational sensory- e perience as the ly resolved, ut nonetheless said that it was a ustifia le h -pothesis since it vas foundational to knowing Russell thus interpreted this sensory, inductive approach to all kno ving as a logically independent principle vhich cannot e derived from sensory e perience itself.- This is a fancy vay of sa -ing that since every ody reUes on their own sense e periences and we all come up wdth essentiall - the same opinions, then it is okay to take it on faith that it is a true theory In terms of scientific discovery and ordinary- kno-yvledge of physical things, we do re uire sensory- e perience. But this is hardly ustification for restricting aU possi le knowledge to what can e sensed. Even contemporary- philosophy of science shows that natural science is as dependent on intuiti -e thinking as it is erificationist theory is self-refuting and ought upon empirical e perience. This to e committed to the flames, as Hume unwittingly encouraged others to do with traditional metaph -sics without reali ing that his udgment apphed to his own theory- as well. Only if there is a personal, infinite Reason -yvhich accounts for the e istence of our finite reason is it philosophically ustifia le to trust our sensory e periences. To depend upon finite reason is impHdtly to depend upon a larger, more universal, self-e istent Reason vhich is the reason why anything e ists. The alternative is nihihsm, which oth Hume and Mackie re ect. Hence, if ve finally have to admit, as RusseU did, that a Humean theory- of knowledge is ased on a con -iction which is not su ect to its o sti rational demands, then we ine ata ly mo 'e ack to Hume's skepticism. Mackie re ected skepticism, ut to adopt Hume's empiricism without his skepticism is sheer dogmatism. made

against

the

The famous British


48

Wood

A second issue which must

faith in God

e

roached

immediately

is this

uestion:

Does

depend upon argumentation upon God's self-revelation This uestion will e addressed later on, ut for now it should e acknowledged that the traditional elief in the i lical God did not come a out our

or

originally through rational, philosophical reflection. If God e ists, his reality is determined for us y his own initiative. Mackie assumes that human rationality alone must decide the issue of God's e istence. Christian in contrast, has devel theology, its rational of God's e istence in the oped understanding light of his self-disclo sure in Paul that God showed himself in the fullness of time history. argues Galatians 4:4 which he means that when the human race had reached a y mature

point

when it could

God introduced himself

appreciate

and understand God's true nature, then fully. Out of God's self-introduction.

personally theology was then a le to construct a rational theological understand ing through reflecting on the meaning of this divine disclosure. To take seriously and

Christian

Christian

why

elief in God should

re uire

Christians

that

one

e amine in detail the main

rea

elieve in God, namely the history of revelation. Mackie's almost e clusive focus on rational argumentation ased on his verificationist son

theory of truth ignores the original reason why Christians

elieve.

IS GOD-TALK RATIONAL

elieves deductive and non-deductive arguments will determine the He points out there is an a priori, deductive ele

Mackie

uestion

of God's e istence.'

thinking, ut he gives priority to the a posteriori, non-deductive ele pointedly, there must e clear evidence of an empirical kind to con vince the thoughtful person today that God e ists. Many of Mackie's epistemic considerations are surely on target. It is insuffi cient for faith to e grounded simply on itself. Otherwise faith degenerates into superstition. Theistic claims thus cannot e e empted from a critical e amination ment in all

ment. More

of the evidence. In fact, the modern demand for critical reflection on the nature of truth is the product of Christian theology itselL Christian faith would not e

true to itself if it

Mackie's too

re ected

critical

God in Jesus may e in part a out causal reasoning. It is

contradictory,

thinking.

rief dismissal of the rational claims of

that Hume's

a

historical revelation of

already adopted Hume's attitude not to highly interesting, say parado ical or even of divine action in history is primary re ection ecause he

had

a miracle, and a miracle would e a contradiction of the causal laws of nature. Hume says such a violation of the law of causality can not e allowed.' Yet, and here is the curious turn in his thinking, his so-called skepticism a out the cosmological proof of God is ased on his denial that we

ecause it would constitute

know whether there is any such thing as causality.'' The only things know, he says, are things which are immediately sensuous i.e., what we can

physically

see,

touch, hear, smell, and

taste.

Incidentally,

Hume's

we

can

skepticism


The Miracle

causality

a out

matic slum er ' ence

thing

is the very

ecause Hume's

itself.

that Kant said

theory destroyed

At any rate, Hume wanted to have it

theistic arguments,

awakened

ut then

the

of Atheism

49

of out my dog philosophical asis of sci me

oth ways. He uses the law of causahty it in a self-serving way to support his

against rehgious skepticism. Interestingly enough, Mackie em races Hume's argument to support his reasons for not elieving in the Christian revelation of God in his tory, ut nowhere does he note this logical inconsistency in Hume's thinking. In fact, Mackie falls victim to the same contradiction. He argues against the ecause Lei ini 's we version cosmological argument allegedly cannot know that everything must have a sufficient reason.' Yet his argument against mira uses

cles is that it contradicts the natural law of must have

reason

which

assumes

that every

rational, causal e planation.' He insists on the rational princi thing of to disallow miracle and ustify his atheism, ut he dis ualifies causality ple the theist's

a

of causal

reasoning which would re uire that God is the ultimate everything. dogmatically asserts that causal reasoning ustifies atheism, and at the same time dogmatically disallows causal reasoning to e used y theists for e plaining the origin of the world. Like Hume, it is okay when the principle of causality serves his purposes, ut not okay when it doesn't. He says that we might well wish the universe conformed to our intellec tual preference for some ultimate cause, ut we have no right to assume that the universe will comply with our intellectual preferences. In the same vein, Mackie should also allow that he might wish that the universe was not open to a divine miracle, ut he has no right to assume that the universe will comply with his intellectual preference. In the final analysis, whether or not a miracle has occurred such as the incar nation of an infinite God is a historical uestion, not merely a philosophical one. urther, if Mackie as he must do allows that causal reasoning is valid and nec essary for understanding the se uence of individual occurrences in nature and in history, then it is even more compelling to see that the larger whole of reality also e e plained according to causal reasoning. To say the whole of reality is an irrational given is to undermine reason itself. or that would e to say that there is no reason why reasoning e ists, and if there is no reason why reasoning e ists, then reason cannot e ist or it is the very nature of reasoning to find an e pla nation why everything and anything e ists. Even if there were an infinite regress in the past so that the world was eternal, causal reasoning still re uires us to ask the larger uestion of the whole and why there is anything rather than sheer use

Cause of

Mackie

nothing.

IS GOD-TALK MERELY EMOTIONAL

The

reasons

for faith

or

dence. The critical factor is

simply ased on the empirical personal udgment. Why do some people elieve unfaith

are never

evi

and


50

Wood

others do not ased

e sure,

To

a

scholarly udgment to eheve ody of evidence,

consideration of the whole personal and intuitive. There are

on a

largely itive udgment. Certainly Emotional factors

or

not to

elieve is

udgment is many factors which influence this intu cultural and traditional elements are important. ut this

fairly decisive. The attitudes which we developed throughout important. Damaged emotions and hurt feelings, with along severely disappointing religious e pectations, contri ute to our atti tudes of skepticism and despair. On the other hand, many do not eheve ecause they fail to see the practical or personal relevance of faith. Others would like to elieve, ut think the empirical evidence is insufficient. Yet many eheve ecause they see its practical and personal relevance, and are convinced of its rational empirical evidence. Even in Jesus' day, some eheved in him as the Son our

as

life

well

are

of God, ut most did not. To illustrate further the

logic

are

most

personal

element of

having

to

udge

the evidence and

of faith, one can o serve the difference in opinion etween Mackie and Kai Nielsen, oth of whom are self-avowed atheists. Mackie thinks the logic of

theological language is entirely intelligi le and coherent, ut Nielsen God-language of Christian thought incoherent and confused. As we have pointed out, Richard Swin urne has devoted much of his scholarly efforts to demonstrating the coherence of Christian talk a out God. Mackie Christian

frankly

calls the

agrees with Swin urne, ut Nielsen does not. Yet against Swin urne's view of theism. How does

The

answer

one

is in

know whether Mackie

part

that there is

a

or

oth Mackie and Nielsen agree

Nielsen is correct

Or Swin urne

personal intuitive element in all knowing.

only are the empirical facts of our e perience characteri ed y epistemic pro a ility, ut even our understanding of what is logical is su ect to dispute. This is not a case for skepticism, ut a frank acknowledgement of our finite, lim ited understanding of the nature of truth. Mackie is certainly correct in saying that a persuasive factor is our under What Mackie minimi es is the larger role standing of the evidence as a whole. which intuitive udgments play in the decision-making process. More specifical ly, Mackie fails to show the larger role that our presuppositions e ercise in the attitudes we develop concerning the larger ody of evidence. Of course, Mackie is right to point out that the psychological dimension is not an ade uate foundation for a thoughtful person to ase their faith on. ' But, Mackie fails to give the feeling dimension due consideration as part of the larger ody of evidence. Aristotle De Anima and Rhetoric , and the long history of phi losophy, recogni e the epistemic value of feeling and emotion. ' Mackie appar ently would simply reduce religion to mere feeling and then dismiss it. eeling is intrinsic to a rational understanding of the meaning of life. While feeling is not always to e trusted in informing us a out the o ective truth of our world, we certainly could not know in the fullest sense of the term without Not


The Miracle

of Atheism

51

capacity for feeling. Our capacity to know truly can go no deeper than our capacity to feel, ut our feehngs can certainly e deeper than our capacity to know. The larger ody of people in the history of the world have generally relied more upon their feelings than upon their capacity to reason in deciding the fundamental issues of life. That does not mean feelings are inherently anti thetical to reason, ut our capacity for feeling is more spontaneous and provides us with a more immediate perception of things, whereas our capacity to reason is more deli erate and provides us with a mediated interpretation of reality. The fact that rehgion is so deeply part and parcel of the human situation, as is evidenced y what most people in the history of the world have felt, cannot e easily discarded as irrational. To conclude that God does not e ist ecause feel ing is an integral part of religious elief is un ustifia le. While the tendency of modern theology has often een to put faith on the side of feeling as Schleiermacher did , Mackie puts atheism on the side of reason and re ects the cognitive significance of feeling. Yet reason devoid of feeling is no longer true or reason cannot dispense with the asic feeling of trust, meaningfulreason. ness, purpose, and unity and still do the task of developing a well-reasoned per spective on life. Interestingly enough, the successor of A. J. Ayer as professor of logic at the University of O ford is Michael Dummett, a devout Roman Catholic Christian. In contrast to Ayer who was the leading logical empiricist in Britain, his view is

our

that if he did not

elieve in God, there would

e little motivation for him to

study philosophy and logic. He ecame a Christian ecause he thought it was the reasona le thing to do. He says, 'T think it's only to do with the eitgeist that religious elief is intellectually e tremely unfashiona le. In regard to the impasse of the role of logic in deciding the uestion of God's e istence, Hein W. Cassirer's reason for ecoming a Christian are revealing. His father

the eminent Kantian scholar, Ernst Cassirer. Hein Cassirer went to taught at Glasgow University. At the age of thirty, even efore going to Britain, he was recogni ed as an authority on Aristotle. When he was

Britain in 1934 and

ecame

Glasgow University in 194 , he ecame philosophy. At the age of 50, he says he right authority had no knowledge whatever of religious pro lems nor any interest in them. My sole preoccupation was with philosophical uestions. or some ine plica le the Apostle Paul. He to read when old Cassirer he was reason, egan fifty years was and moral with Paul's understanding of the insights immediately impressed in his

a

permanent faculty mem er

own

relationship

an

on

at

Kant's

etween law and grace. Cassirer also admits that he had grown dis pretensions of reason which he thinks typically characteri e

satisfied with the the writings of

philosophers.

philosophy is supposed on all sides to e a purely rational activity, relying upon the intellect and the intellect alone, without ever allowing While


52

Wood

itself to

e

swayed y any personal or emotional ias, there remains this fact: Utterly different conclusions are reached y various thinkers, each philosopher arguing with great vehemence and ingenuity in favor of the position he wishes to uphold, while yet the possi ility is whol ly e cluded that agreement might e reached etween him and his oppo nents. This, of course, raises the crucial pro lem whether any such thing as a reha le criterion of truth is availa le within the compass of philosophical thinking at all. So far as I could see, no satisfactory solution had ever een

distur ing

offered. '

In the

light

of the

whether the intellect damental

pro lems

impasse which reason was locked into, he wondered really a suita le instrument for dealing with the fun

was

of e istence.

At the age of 5 , Cassirer

the He rew

prophets,

was

apti ed

and wrote

a

treatise

on

Paul, Kant and

which he called Grace and Law. At the conclusion of his

ook, he e plains his reasons for coming to accept the Christian faith. It was ecause of the moral, life-changing message of the grace of God of which Paul was a powerful witness. As for myself, I may e plain here that, if I have come to em race the Christian

religion,

this has

een almost

wholly due

to the

impres

sion made upon me not only y St. Paul's teaching ut y his personality as it reveals itself in his epistles. He goes on to say there is only one way a human can ecome his or her true self, and that is eing y making a complete surren

der to Christ. 3 Is it

really possi le

to

Cassirer writes:

conclusively

prove that the Christian faith is true

fully aware that nothing that has een said may serve to esta lish either that Jesus Christ is the Son of God or that he appeared to St. Paul on the road to Damascus. Yet, as I have remarked efore, I myself have no dou t that St. Paul is right on oth counts. This is largely ecause I am, of course,

impression I have formed of St. Paul is that he was the very last man to self-deception and ecause, in conse uence, I find it impossi le to entertain seriously the idea that his spiritual pilgrimage had a hallu cinatory e perience for its starting point. the

fall victim to

I

suspect that

Hein

Cassirer's

testimony

would smack of sheer

su ectivity

for Mackie. But at least Cassirer gave the i lical documents a serious study and the overall ody of evidence persuaded him that faith in Christ is reasona ly

professes atheism and the asis of willing to admit. Our choices a out the meaning of life, or its lack of meaning, are never purely rationalistic and intellectualistic, as Cassirer accurately points out. The foundational issues of life are not decided y reasoning deductively or ased in

o ective

truth. The

his decision involves

more

point is,

Mackie

factors than he is


The Miracle

of Atheism

53

non-deductively, as important as oth types of reasoning are. The decision of truth is finally arrived at through dialectic dialogical thinking. Out of the con versations of oth private and pu lic life, of oth practical and academic life, do the attitudes we develop a out trust, unity, meaning and purpose take shape. The decisive issue is not simply having a grasp of the larger ody of evidence, ut the attitudes which we ring to that larger ody of evidence. Mackie fails to consider this larger epistemic dimension of reason which includes values, feel ings, emotions and attitudes. Mackie presumes too much when he thinks he proves that God does not e ist. Hence he calls it a miracle that any should elieve. T. H. Hu ley, the father of modern

agnosticism, very much disliked theologians who thought they could prove God's e istence, ut even more distasteful to Hu ley were the philoso phers who were atheists: Of all the senseless a le I have ever had occasion to read, the demonstrations of these philosophers who undertake

to tell

us

all

a out the nature of God would

e the worst, if they were not surpassed y the still greater a surdities of the philosophers who try to prove that there is no God.

Though Hume did not try to prove atheism, he did reduce knowledge to feel ing or sentiment. The guide to life, he says, is custom esta lished y our natural instincts and feelings, not reason. ' Rational reflection would immo ili e us com pletely in the clutches of skepticism were not nature too strong for us, Hume o serves. ' Hume inconsistently uses reason to show that reason is not our guide in life

Bertrand Russell, a religious agnostic, says that Hume's skepticism was ecause having undermined reason he then appealed to reason for

insincere,

interpretation of the world. Hume was prepared to say that really anything not even the real physical world eyond our senses. It is difficult to argue with a skeptic ecause they make no real claims to The knowledge. only way that Mackie can e consistent on this point is to e a

developing his we

own

do not

skeptic,

know

ut instead he is

an

avowed atheist.

Mackie does not follow Hume's

reasoning

to this final conclusion. Nowhere

does Mackie propose that our guide to life is a custom which is grounded in pas sion and feeling as opposed to reason. Nor does he suggest that he em races a

knowledge. or Hume, reason e poses the understanding of life which would propel am iguities us into the of a yss Pyrrhonianism if our natural instincts and feehngs did not override our rational reflection. But Mackie assumes that reason is our guide to life which frees us from skepticism and ena les us to re ect a religious perspec tive on life altogether. I suspect that Hume, despite Mackie's attempt to e a modern restatement of Hume's epistemic sensationahsm, would not take too kindly to this misappro priation of his thought. I say this ecause on one occasion when Hume was din-

skeptical

attitude a out

uncertainties and

our

claims to

of

our


54

Wood

ing

with the philosophes of Paris, he caustically remarked that he didr 't elieve in the e istence of atheists. Baron d'Hol ach replied to Hume that he had een most unfortunate and that now he was surrounded seventeen atheists. ' The

point

of Hume's comment

than what is

possi le

y

that any alleged atheist is claiming to know more for the human mind to reasona ly conclude. Both the athe was

ism of his Paris friends and their commitment to

the universe

were more

Apparently

Mackie thinks he has

cal sensationalism

the whole

than Hume

ody

developed

e planation of rationally proved. logic of Hume's philosophi

a

elieved could the

mechanistic

e

consistently than his mentor, ut it is far from clear that of evidence which Mackie em races for himself proves his athe more

right when he accuses Hume of eing insin ility to demonstrate the truth of anything, ut Mackie is virtually uncritical and deadly serious a out reason's a ility to prove his atheistic perspective. There is hardly a tinge of even a mild form of skepti cism in Mackie's philosophical point of view It is apparent that theists aren't the only ones who sometimes surrender to dogmatism Mackie also riefly alludes to three other sources for e plaining the nature of euer ach, Mar and reud. These three sources are perhaps more religion widely used as a asis for em racing the atheistic position than Hume, perhaps ecause they are more clearly atheistic in their thinking than was Hume, as well as the fact that their writings are more widely known. euer ach's idea of God human ideals was a significant landmark in the history of athe as a of pro ection ism ecause he was the first to offer a genuinely philosophical ustification for modern atheism. To e sure, modern atheism originated in the development of modern natural science and its mechanistic interpretation of the world provided y the eighteenth century rench materialists. Mar 's socio-economic interpre tation of religion has also een widely influential. But reud's psychological analysis of religion as compensation for repressed comple es and unconscious wishes has given atheism a road asis of acceptance, even though euer ach's analysis is generally recogni ed to e more philosophically persuasive. Each of these interpretations has een riefly incorporated into Mackie's thought with little critical e amination, and he limits the possi le sources of religion to these social, economic and psychological factors as they have een o served in the socalled natural history of religion, as Hume termed it in his writings, as opposed to a supernatural history of revelation. istic conclusion. Russell may e cere in his attack on reason's a

IS GOD-TALK NEUROTIC Mackie thinks it strange that so many rehgious people draw from psychology insights into human emotion as support for theism. It surely seems fair

and its

uncomforta le with the role which emotion and feeling perception of truth. This is illustrated in his assessment of

to say that Mackie is

play

in

our

Niet sche's

style

of atheism. He thinks that Niet sche's

terminology,

God is


The Miracle

silly concept.' Mackie apparently feeling concerning the reality of God. Niet

dead ' is human

God dead

a

Where has God

gone

atheism em races. Mackie's rather tion of God's e istence

of Atheism

55

fails to reali e the

of

sche's dramatic

Is

depth uestion,

reflects the emotional loss which modern

emotionally

portrays that, for him,

casual and nonchalant e amina

not much of a positive value is really at stake if God doesn't e ist. Though he is uite sure that psychological factors are the ultimate source of religions, the ta les can e turned and it could e argued that atheistic theories are faith-systems as well and are also merely a psychological compensation for reducing neurotic stress. At least Karl Jung so interpreted reud's atheism and his concept of the Oedipus Comple as a rationali ation for reud's own neurot ic fears.'' Certainly Mackie's need to refute theism and defend atheism could e open to such a psychological analysis, even as he has accused religious people of the need to mask their own fears. Harvard psychologist, Gordon Allport, cau tioned that those who find the religious principle of life illusory would do well not to scrutini e their own working principles too closely. It certainly seems e tremely strange, that if religion is merely ased on fantasy and is so irrational, that it would generate such a lifelong o session and re uire such a serious, scholarly refutation as Mackie provides. Gordon Allport has shown that religion can e an important aspect of developing a mature personality. He writes: A man's religion is the audacious id he makes to ind himself to creation and to the Creator. It is his ultimate attempt to enlarge and to complete his own person ality y finding the supreme conte t in which he rightly elongs. ' In this respect, it can e argued that Mackie's atheism is his own personal religious attempt to provide a sense of meaning and purpose to his own life. It is inevita le that one will attempt to locate his her own individuality within the larger conte t of reality. Whether or not one can e perience a sense of peace and security with the denial of any larger meaningful conte t is e actly the uestion which every ody must decide for oneself. Mackie may e perfectly content with out a larger meaningful conte t, ut this lack of unity and meaning is the essence of nihilism. Mackie simply asserts that goodness and value are inherently human.' He has no further need to ask why this is so. He also refuses to feel the nihilistic implications of his atheism. What is also a glaring omission in Mackie's use of Hume's philosophy, as noted a ove, is that he completely ignores Hume's claim to e a skeptic. There is not a large difference etween Hume's skepticism and Niet sche's nihilism e cept that the latter e presses a depth of feeling a out the loss of certainty and meaning of the world which is suppressed in skepticism. Hume writes of his own philosophy: By all that has een said the reader will easily perceive that the phi losophy contained in this ook is very skeptical and tends to give us a notion of the imperfections and narrow limits of human understanding. Almost all reason ing is there reduced to e perience, and the elief which attends e perience is


5

Wood

e plained to e nothing ut a peculiar sentiment or lively conception produced y ha it. '' Mackie's appropriation of Hume's philosophy stops short of em rac ing his skepticism, ut he has simply e changed it for a narrow dogmatism. Mackie denies he is a nihilist, ut without a larger conte t of meaning to which he can relate his life, it would seem that he is a nihilist whether certainly he recogni es it or not. Toward the end of his life, Niet sche wrote: That I have een asically a nihilist is something that I have only recently come to admit. ' Niet sche's slow admission of his nihilism leads him to say that it seems impos si le that 'aimlessness in itself should seems

of

to admit here that

our

faith.

'

Niet sche

pure nihilism is really impossi le from the standpoint the logician that Mackie is, he certainly could not em race

consistency. Being feeling

nihilism without

a

the contradiction. Yet, if atheism is the final word that larger reason for the meaning of the universe can e

God is a sent and that

no

had

effective

there

asis of

e the

e

philosophical

defense

against nihilism Hans Kung, recogni ing necessarily nihilists, made this in his Does God E ist and Mackie was ook. point particularly annoyed y it.' Niet sche's atheism at least catches the depth of human feeling and thinking can

no

while

that all atheists

are

not

in contrast to Mackie's too comforta le refutation of

elief in God. This is not to

say that Mackie should not e taken seriously. Indeed, his considerations are worthy and respecta le. But his conclusions are too hasty and too sweeping to

religious e perience. why Mackie's atheism is not convincing is that he shows little awareness of the e istential feeling which Tillich calls the a ysmal depth of reality. The feeling that we are strung out over the a yss is not neces sarily a pathological, psychological state of mind. It defines our ontological situ e considered

Among

a

final

other

ation. Neurotic fears

the real tic

source

ideologies

of

low to

reasons

our

are

meaningless

and

our

attention from

and doctrines, even if they are atheis e rationali ations to hide our neurotic insecuri

Ideologies

and doctrines, can e relieved

ties. These an ieties may

of

irrational diversions which distract

an ieties.

nothingness

through therapy, ut the e istential an iety e cured though it may e covered up

cannot

and denied in neurotic rationali ations.

developing the nihilism of Niet sche, the continental e istentialists certainly insightful in pinpointing the conse uence of a world without God. Can atheism e taken seriously without the depth of feeling which nihilism entails Any atheism which denies the implications of nihilism as its conse uence is emotionally shallow. or it fails to come to terms with the an iety of meaninglessness. If the history of religions proves anything, it proves that the feeling of aloneness and emptiness is a universal feeling which pushes one to try to come to terms with the ultimate meaning and purpose of the universe. This emotional need for a satisfying relationship with the larger meaning of the uni verse is essentially a rehgious need. To acknowledge this psychological need is not to e plain away rehgious e perience. It is to recogni e, as did Augustine, In further

are


The Miracle

that

we were

peace and There

intended to have

a

rest in the world until

can

e

no

relationship we

of Atheism

with God and that

we

find peace and rest in God. and human

emotionally fulfilling relationships

of the term in

apart from this religious this religious perception which universally stamps the pages of

the truest is

sense

our

world

57

cannot find

happiness

in

dimension. It human histo

ry. It does not seem reasona le to conclude that this universal cry of the human heart for the warmth of divine love and protection can e e plained away as

merely infantile and a

denial of

our

and truth. To

mere

wishful

thinking. Such a conclusion resem les more of a genuine openness to our need for reality

e istential needs than

e sure, this e istential need in itself does not prove the e istence e used to ustify any particular religious elief. can it

personal a rationally significant factor dimension in reality.

of

God. Nor

a

But it is

Creatures

C. S. Lewis writes:

are

for

not

recogni ing

the

validity

of the

religious

orn with desires unless satisfaction for

cold, there is warmth which we seek. If we are to is water there satisfy our thirst. If we are tired, there is rest for our thirsty, odies. If we desire fellowship and unity eyond what this world can offer, the those desires e ists.

If

we are

pro a le e planation is that I was made for another world. If none of my earthly pleasures satisfy iL that does not prove that the universe is a fraud. Pro a ly earthly pleasures were never meant to satisfy iL ut only to arouse iL to suggest the real thing. Mackie gives considera le attention to William James's arieties of Religious E perience. James elieves his studies of first-hand reports, oth pu hshed and unpu lished, show that the origin of rehgious e perience is more than self-sug gestion. Mackie re ects this conclusion. Instead he offers a psychological e plana tion which draws upon Hume's idea that fear is the origin of rehgion. ' It may well e that fear is a motivation for people ecoming religious. But what is fear Since the rise of psychoanalysis, we have een made aware of the

most

more

precise

distinction

etween fear and

an iety dread .

ear is

an

emotional

is an emotional response response to a specific danger, whereas an iety dread to a more diffused and uncertain danger. The classic treatise on an iety is found

and Kierkegaard's writings, ut Tilhch's The Courage to Be provides a helpful e istential etween he which in an iety and distinguished insightful discussion finite e is our of condition universal the is neurotic an iety. E istential an iety and finally death. tence as we feel threatened y guilt, meaninglessness and the var fear etween distinction this Unfortunately, Mackie does not pursue in

ious kinds of an ieties.

in reaction Presuma ly Hume thought fear was a universal emotion a mind in need for safety and security. He apparently had pathological defini human tion of fear which is inhi iting and destructive of personality. Hume's life was apparently free of these neurotic tendencies according to his own account. He descri ed himself as a man of mild disposition and an open. to

our


Wood

58

social, cheerful humor.

Did Hume feel

a sense

of e istential

an iety

as

he

con

larger meaning of life in general Apparently not. Shortly efore his death, he composed a funeral oration of himself. ' The ruling passion of his life was literary fame, though he says his disappointment of not achieving it sidered the

never soured my temper. It is apparent that Mackie likewise did not feel the e istential an ieties associ

ated with

finitude.

Certainly that he re ected nihilism would seem to indicate feelings. In fact, many intellectual people dis claim any awareness of e istential an iety and feelings of estrangement. Many well-educated people simply en oy a comforta le kind of pragmatism without the slightest hint of eing plagued with the kind of e istential an iety and despair which Kierkegaard, Niet sche, Heidegger, Jaspers, Sartre, Camus and our

that he felt free of these an ious

Tillich wrote a out.

though many despair as opposed to Even

does not in itself

American and British a

neurotic

despair

ness

our

finiteness, this

that it isn't there. In fact, it could e thought that the of e istential an iety may e symptomatic of an undiag

developed an iety. In their

e istentialists

of e istential

do not feel the e istential

mean

denial of any feeling nosed neurotic fear. But, of course, even when iety, they will not necessarily ecome theists.

European

people

which arises out of

atheism

people

admit their e istential

uite the

directly

case, atheism

contrary,

in response to their

was

intentionally developed

follow the

tion of fear

If

invalidated

ecause it

we

ought

we

out of

an

thinking

arose as an

attempt

to

of Mackie

attempt

to conclude that atheism can also

aware

consciously developed

response to the emotion of fear dread . Are we to conclude, then, that e istentialist atheism is discredited was

come

so

in

ecause it

to terms with the

emo

who concluded that theism is

to resolve the emotion of fear

e

an

the continental

then

discredited

theory y incorporating reud's interpretation of reh Religion e presses and seems to fulfill very strong and

Mackie refines Hume's Mackie writes:

gion. persistent wishes, oth conscious and unconscious, and that the eliever's sup posed relation to God or the gods is significantly like that of a child to its par ents, and is pro a ly influenced y the adult's memory of that relation, will Mackie's uncritical acceptance of reud's view of religion hardly e disputed. as a universal o sessional neurosis is surprising, to say the least. or, despite the reud in the modern world and the significant amount of enormous influence of pioneering work which he did in psychology, his views, and especially his reli gious views, have not een followed uncritically even y his own students. Karl Jung was reud's most distinguished student, and reud had wanted him to e his successor. ' They en oyed a close friendship for a time until reud a ruptly roke with Jung over the issue of religion. Jung frankly says that reud himself had a neurosis, no dou t diagnosea le and one with highly trou lesome symptoms. ' He in particular eheved that at the core of reud's neuro-


The Miracle

sis

was

his denial of the

religious aspects of his own personal e iographer of Karl Jung reports that

dence of his neurosis, one son himself Jung . This

Jung

to

accept his

reud

with

over

the

Among

As evi

reud wanted

a

in the way that reud had a strong need for reud fainted twice when Jung e pressed disagreement

death wish.

reud.''

o vious to

istence.

59

was seen

views.

etween his

tionship

of Atheism

theory

the hundreds of

of the

patients

This iographer also o serves that the rela Oedipus Comple and his own life was not that

sought

Jung, he o served that a key religious e perience. He also o served that their recovery was directly related to their a ility to once again e perience the meaning of their lost religious faith. ' Paul it , a psychologist from New York University, recently has argued that atheism is an unconscious Oedipal wish-fulfillment.... that comes from the very reudian theory. center of Unlike reud's interpretation of the Oedipus Comple , it suggested that atheism can e the result of those who re ect God factor in their

as

their

ather

an iety

disorders

was a

out

loss of faith and

ecause of their desire to kill their

reud's dislike of his

own

fathers. In fact,

it

shows

earthly father was highly influential in the devel opment of reud's atheism. Not religion, ut atheism is an o sessional neuro sis reud's attack on religion was thus a pro ection of his own neurosis. One widely known and respected Neo- reudian was Karen Horney. While retaining what she considered the fundamentals of reud's teachings, she dis agreed with reud's view that neurosis can e e plained as a compulsive, instinctive drive aimed at satisfaction. Rather, distur ed human relationships are the cause of an iety disorders. Horney descri es one of the symptoms of dis tur ed human relationships as the need to move away from people. This is the need to e e cessively self-sufficient, detached, and totally ade uate in oneself. One of its primary symptoms is the ina ility to involve oneself in commitment that

own

and trust. '

A British

psychoanalyst,

rank Lake, has also written

e tensively

on

this an i

ety disorder. He calls it the schi oid position. The schi oid position is distrust ful of feeling and emotion in general. It suppresses all feelings hate, love, oy, sadness. ' Scorn also characteri es schi oid ehavior. ' Lake notes that reud was una le to

e istential

on

outside the self

recogni e personal sources

an iety as

ecause

the

regard dependence truly human eing.

he did not

prere uisite

of the schi oid

of

a

type. away from others reflected in the schi oid opposite of the need position in what Horney calls the need of moving toward people. This is typ ical of the hysterical compliant person who clings to others ecause of a com Lake elieves

reud's

The

pulsory

own

neurosis to

need to

was

move

e hked and receive affection in

These two attitudes reflect the

an

indiscriminate fashion. '

of those who suffer from neurotic

asic positions schi oid self-sufficient private person distrusts feeling ecause an iety. In contrast to in one a upon others. relationship feelings put dependent

The


0

Wood

Oriental

philosophy, which pri es detachment as a means of spiritual achieve ment, neurotic detachment is not a choice, ut is an inner compulsion. ' Horney further points out that the most striking need for the neurotic detached person is for self-sufficiency and its most positive is resourcefulness. Blaise Pascal

to defend

recogni ed this themselves against

e pression

resourcefulness of

some philosophers who seek the commitment of faith. Their intellectuahst their minds from the inner truth a out themselves. The philoso

defenses protect phers, he says, have turned away from the lust of sensory pleasure and the lust of power for the lust of knowledge they are una le to have faith in what hes eyond them and so they su stitute faith in their own reason. Pascal says the

philosopher encourages us to find rest in ourselves. But Pascal says this cannot produce inner rest. It only comes from a commitment to God who is the source of reason and truth. In light of Pascal's emphasis on the warmth of divine fel lowship, it is not surprising that Mackie is so predisposed against him. Kierkegaard also knew the inade uacy of finite reason and our ina ility to meaning from within ourselves apart from commitment to a per own writings grew out of the la oratory of his life. He knew from e perience the commitment an iety of the schi oid position. As Lake o serves, apart from Kierkegaard's commitment to the God revealed in Jesus Christ who sustained him, he could not have een so open and so forthright in the insights of mental suffering. Lake writes: A primary characteristic of afflic tion and despair is its attempt to remain hidden. Precisely those who suffer most e perience

true

sonal God. His

from it most wish to hide it.. ..even from oneself.

'

position According to psychoana catastrophic splitting of the person in the earliest weeks and months of one's life. It is usually associated with the loss of a signifi cant person's face as mother. It egins where the union with mother is lost. The ecause they have no early schi oid is one who can't trust in the out there afflicted with the schi oid

Why people lytic theory, it is the are

result of

a

memory of a secure world centered in a source person who came to answer them in their time of need. They also tend to e contemptuous of those who do elieve in the out there.

Psychoanalytic

'

studies show that this neurotic dread is driven

underground

feeling of hysterical-emo

ecause it is intolera le to the conscious mind. Dread is the insecure

isolated world where you are the living tional person, this fear causes the person to in

an

only o ect. cling to others

In the

in the

retreating-

intellectual person, this fear causes people to detach themselves from dependen cy on others and they develop a sense of self-sufficiency and are uite resource

ful in

constructing

a

meaningful world

all of their

own.

or many years medical science assumed that the nervous system of a a y irth and of the earliest months of life to was too undeveloped for memories of e recorded in the

drug therapy

rain. But since the 1950s, the psychiatric use of a reactive ust how vividly the earliest events of life are imprinted

has shown


The Miracle

on

the mind. Patients

hterally

were

of Atheism

a le to relive the trauma of

of suffocation

1

irth and the

damaging e perience they pushed through the irth canal. Other patients have een a le to relive, through a reactive drug therapy, the earliest hours immediately following their irth, and memories of a andon ment, isolation, and human coldness often have een the e perience of those infants who later ecame afflicted with commitment-an iety.' as

were

Lake, who has done e tensive clinical work with schi oid persons,

that the

unloving

elieves

faces and stern voices at the time of

irth of man's distortion of the truth a out the ultimate personal God Himself. With rare insight. Lake shows that this is where the lie is

are the

reality,

itter memories of

eginnings

first told a out God, the lie which darity with the race in ignorance,

edevils humanity, which determines our soli pride, fear, an iety, despair, idolatry and lust,

un elief and murderous hatred of God Himself.' If

relationships

home have

een developed in an appropriate fashion, the development of one's own ideas and eliefs has een laid. But when this foundation has een cracked y poor relationships, the child learns to relate to the outside world either y clinging to others or y detaching oneself from others. Undou tedly many people have a clinging and panic-driven rela tionship to God. They often speak of their relationship to God in highly emotion al and affective terms. They may even give the appearance of eing super-spiri tual, which is usually compensation for feelings of insecurity. Detaching oneself from others is a commitment-an iety disorder which also may have religious implications it is the attempt to protect ourselves from eing hurt y creating distance from others. The affliction of dread is seen particularly in intellectual people who are especially resourceful in creating a world of conceptuality which promises protection from e perience and re uires no o liga tions to others.'' The special difficulty of someone suffering from an iety-com mitment is the failure to feel the presence and love of God as a caring heavenly ather. This person finds it difficult to feel ecause he or she is locked into a world of protective reason. This is the neurotic position most typical of intellectual people, as Lake has shown. The hysterical clinging person desires a person-centered universe which will guarantee security and safety. But the schi oid position has no need for such a personal universe. As Lake puts iL The craving is for an order ased on any thing ut dependence on others. Since all that has een offered y availa le per sons amounts, not to an ordered world, ut to chaos, the ego takes refuge in a order ased on its own cogitations. ' Lake identifies the e istentialist theolo gians, Rudolf Bultmann and Paul Tillich, as representative of the schi oid posi at

foundation for the

tion ecause of their attitude of distrust toward the historical foundation of Christian faith and their impersonal view of God.''' Lake shows that St. Paul's

warnings against

inflated intellectuahsm and

ter to the Corinthians and the Colossian

gnostic speculation,

letters,

are

in the first let

directed at the kinds of


2

Wood

defenses The

typical of the

gnostic's

schi oid

position.

Lake writes:

ordinary Christians and indeed of the Bi lical record superior person. He assumes he knows etter than the record of the witnesses ecause he always feels his own independent men tal aristocracy as an endowment which must take precedence over mere evidence in the o ective world. Gnostics show disdain, and not a little it terness, towards them. This reveals something of the secret scorn of them selves in which they were driven. It conceals and denies their deep envy of warm human ties, against the acceptance of which their life is in recoil.' view of

itself is that of the

e ample of scorn and distrust is reflected in a de ate on theism atheism place on the campus of the University of Mississippi in 1988 in which two of the several participants were J. P. Moreland and Antony lew. lew is an analytical philosopher whose sympathies are with the logical empiri cist and their verification theory of truth. J. P. Moreland is a Christian theist who One

which took

ases his faith

on

the historical revelation of God in Jesus of Na areth

as

record

ed in the New Testament. Moreland, having already argued a careful and rea soned defense of theism, gave personal testimony to his faith in Christ in a warm

loving manner. lew's response was: Moreland's appeal to his 'personal e periences' strikes me as a solutely grotes ue. This ina ility to respect the witness of someone else, along with the scornful e pression of a superior atti tude, ear all the marks of the schi oid position which psychoanalysts descri e. It is one thing not to e persuaded y someone's testimony, ut it is uite anoth er matter to rush aside someone's personal e perience with an air of arrogance and condescension. The suppression of warm feelings is typical of the schi oid position. Her ert Butterfield, the internationally respected Cam ridge historian, descri es the e cessive skepticism of some scholars toward i lical history as reflecting a kind of intellectual arrogance which in any field of research One cannot generali e and say that anyone who reduces clarity of the mind. ' re ects the witness of the apostles concerning their faith in Jesus Christ is and

schi oid,

ut the e cessive and

history may

iased attitude of

e accounted for in such

This o servation may not

some

scholars toward

i lical

a manner.

e taken well

Hume and atheists like Mackie who first

y

usually skeptics like e planation. e rationally most holy religion.... is founded on he insists, along with Hume and

some,

ut it is

ring

up this neurotic Mackie thus concludes that the central doctrines of theism cannot

defended. ' ' He agrees with Hume that our

And irrational fear faith, not on reason. reud, that this irrational faith is the product of fear and

an

irrational wish-ful

fillment. Now I

going

am

not

saying

that all atheists

to use the Humean and

are neurotics. My point is that if one is reudian argument that faith is the product of


The Miracle

o

Atheism

3

neurosis, then the argument also can e made against atheism. I agree with Kai Nielsen, who says he knows oth atheists and Christians who are neurotics, and he knows

the final

oth atheists and Christians who

analysis, psychoanalytic interpretations. the truth of theism

other than

or

are

perfectly

atheism must

normal and sane. e decided

on

In

grounds

IS GOD-TALK ETHICAL

surprisingly negative attitude toward lesus of Na areth is remark iased. He particularly takes e ception to the widely sup a ly notion that Christian morality is particularly admira le. ' He inter posed the Old Testament morality without ualifications as ar aric and savage. prets He accuses Jesus of engaging in harsh and unloving ehavior in contradiction to his own preaching on love. He portrays lesus' own ethic as eing irrational to and opposed knowledge. He re ects Jesus' ethic to love our neigh or as ourselves ecause this is only a fantasy. The neurotic connotation of this term, widely used in psychoanalyt ic writings, can hardly e overlooked. Of course there are neurotic religious fan tasies associated with perfectionistic symptoms among some Christian people. But what Mackie fails to understand is the transforming grace of God which Jesus reveals. Of course we can't love the way Jesus taught us to do so without his help. It's impossi le. But through a relationship with Jesus, whose will is one with God, we can come to love like Jesus loved and taught us to love. And this is no fantasy, ut the healthy-minded lifestyle of a mature person reflected in 1 Corinthians 13, as the psychoanalysL Karen Horney, also o served.' Patrick Sherry wrote a philosophical treatise on elief in God. His ook was called. Spirit, Saints, and Immortality. His main point is that the decisive o ective proof for God's e istence revealed through Jesus of Na areth is the lives of the saints, that is, anyone who is a genuine follower of Jesus Christ and has een transformed y his Spirit. What he argues is that if there is a God like Jesus pro claimed, the rationally convincing element is the witness of persons transformed y faith in Christ.' ' Unfortunately, Mackie's focus is almost e clusively upon the evidence of miracles as a asis for confirming or disconfirming faith in God rather than on the personal character and moral integrity of the lives of Christian people. It is certainly true that many ehevers have not e emplified the moral ideal of love, as Mackie so rightly accuses. But for those elievers who consistently practice the presence of God through daily devotional ha its and corporate acts of pu hc worship, the grace-filled life of Jesus Christ will daily transform them into his own moral image. Mackie is right to this e tent if there is no transforming power in the teach ing and life of Jesus with whom elievers claim to have a personal relationship, then the God of Jesus does not e ist. That's the ottom line. Unfortunately Mackie's

uninformed and


Wood

4

Mackie's visions is

rief survey of some who claim to know God through miracles and on the kind of evidence. Even wrong Jesus discredited those

focusing

who would

elieve

The final

simply

ecause of

alleged

miracles and

signs Matt. 12:39 . Spirit love, oy, peace,

proof genuine patience, kindness, goodness, faithfulness, gentleness and self-control Gal. 5:2223 . Jesus said others will know who are his disciples y their fruit John 13:35 . of

Nowhere in the Bi le

faith is the fruit of the

are we

led to think that faith trust in God arises from

a stract, scholarly, academic, and ironclad proof of

a miracle. Nowhere in the New Testament documents is their any sensational display of miracles like a magician would perform on stage. Bi lical miracles are intended to ring an

redemption to the world, not to entertain. C. S. Lewis rightly limits the function of physical miracles to e tremely restricted situations which serve the larger cause of the missionary situation of the Church. ' Not physical miracles, ut the holiness of elievers is the final proof of God's e istence. And holiness means essentially loving God with all your heart and your neigh or as yourself. Without this transforming power of the grace of God mediated through Jesus, claims to know God would e meaningless and groundless. Holiness is primary miracles are secondary If Karen Horney has shown from the standpoint of psychoanalytic studies that neurotic fear is rooted in the failure of human relationships, ' the Bi le shows that the first

fellowship

negative

human emotion to surface after

fear

our

first

parents

afraid and hid themselves Gen.

they 3:10 . The purpose of the grace of God throughout the history of salvation which culminated in Jesus Christ was to produce within human eings the love of God which would ring harmony and understanding among all people. This is why the apostle John says that perfect love casts out fear. He says specifically that roke

there is

no

each other

with God

fear in love

as

God loves

was

were

ecause the love of Christ indwells

us

us

and

we can

love

1 John 4:17-18 . admira le, as enno

ling, as e cellent, if there is any le in its lofty, person-affirming ethic, if there change the character and life of any person into a

If there is any ethic as of literature that is compara

piece

is any availa le

resource

to

truly fulfilled individual, if there is any ond of love which will unite a fragmented world into a ust and holy people esides the gospel of grace offered in Jesus Christ, it has not een o served anywhere else in the history of the world. This is why Rudolf Bultmann, who is certainly no friend to traditional theism or orthodo Christianity, says frankly that there can e no true human fulfillment and personal authenticity apart from faith in Christ. Why He says the uestion is not if this kind of authentic e istence can e discovered some where else in point of facL he says, this type of ualitative e istence has never een discovered apart from faith in Christ. He particularly notes that Heidegger's philosophy of e istence is entirely dependent on the Christian faith Even the neo-Mar ist philosopher, Ernst Bloch, of Kierkegaard and Paul. new,


The Miracle

admits that atheists

a le to survive with

of Atheism

5

degree of meaning in life ecause they religious faith. The contri ution of the Christian view of personhood to the modern world is widely acknowledged also among secular psychologist and moral development theorists. ' I eheve it could e argued that atheism without the enefit of Christian faith would relapse us into the paganism of nature religions. In this respect, modern atheism is really a Christian heresy and cannot survive on its own. live off the

are

orrowed credit credit

a

of

IS GOD-TALK IMMORAL

Mackie

and all

a ly into son

reasons

good

that it is

logically

since evil e ists.

e immoral himself. Here

incoherent to affirm that God is

Such

a

again

all-powerful permitted evil would presum attitudinal feeling dimension comes

God who the

eliever, while recogni ing the dilemma, trusts that there is a rea play. God allows evil. aith acknowledges that we do not have a completely why The

satisfactory of this life

reason

yet,

ut in the future of God's

will know.

kingdom eyond the o scurity only take us so far in pointing out

logic compati ility of divine sovereignty and evil in the world. The est of the arguments to e plain the connection etween God and evil is the free-will defense. It maintains that God chose to limit his sovereignty when he created human eings in his image. The possi ility of evil is corollary to the fact of finite freedom. This helps us to understand something of the logical pro lem. or there is no possi ility of finite freedom and the development of personal respon si ility without the possi ility of evil. Yet what is distur ing from the Christian point of view is the e istential feel ing that there is too much evil rampant in the world for a good, almighty God to permit. This is not a logical argument as such. It is strictly an intuitive perception that pointless and irredeema le evil locks one's a ility to elieve in God. Who hasn't felt this sense of distaste a out God permitting the e cessive, gratuitous evil which allows the suffering and killing of innocent infants and children. Today I listened to the confession of a 15-year-old girl who had een raped repeatedly y her father efore she ran away from home. Outrage Anger Why God If God is so good and so powerful, what is the point of permitting inno cent children to e a used se ually Several years ago I was a chaplain's assistant in a medical center. I was on call with my eeper when I was summoned to the emergency room. When I arrived, several doctors and a num er of nurses were surrounding the ody of an auto we

or now,

can

the

mo ile accident victim. One of the doctors

physically massage his heart in avail. I had the responsi ihty of

a

shced

him open, reached inside to all to no to save his life

lasL frantic attempt

informing

the

family

in the

waiting

room

of his

death. He was 29 years of age and had two small children. I soon learned that his wife had een killed in an automo ile wreck the previous year. What could I tell the grieving sisters, rother, father, mother and two small children What sense


Wood

would it make to tell them that God loved and cared for them None Would a free-will theodicy comfort them Hardly Incomprehensi le suffering calls into uestion the concept of a caring God.

Someone

financial

told me a out an answered prayer that God had provided the for them to afford medical insurance. Why would God provide

once

means

for the medical insurance of father

in ured

in

a car

person and yet not intervene to save the life of a Also ironically, this same person who o tained

one

wreck

medical insurance later

Supposedly God provided incurring astronomical costs to him and his family. This terminally ill patient apparently never felt the contradiction of his situation. I did. Perhaps I felt the irony of the situation ecause I wasn't the one involved in the suffering. Perhaps the intense suffering of the human soul creates a kind of spiritual perception which is not normally apparent. I could have scoffed inwardly at the naivete of this patient, ut then perhaps the oke was on me and my spiritual lindness. Who was I to pass udg ment on the providence or lack of it of God Wolfhart Pannen erg was asked in a forum at As ury Theological Seminary a out his resolution of the pro lem of suffering and the Christian concept of a caring God, especially in the light of the holocaust. Pannen erg replied y uoting from a Jewish author who said that after Auschwit no one can talk a out God any longer. Pannen erg then remarked: 1 always felt that you can say that only if you are in a position of watching a tragedy in theater. You cannot say that, if you think of yourself in the place of medical insurance

so

developed

terminal

he could die from

cancer.

cancer

without

those who had to go into the gas ovens, ecause those who had to walk that way had their only hope in singing psalms. ...The power to deal with e periences like that is not in

simply o serving

them in others,

ut if

one

The

pro lem

There is

no

of

suffering,

through them only power that

has to go

oneself.... The moment you elieve in God you get hold of the ena les you face e periences of terror like that. '

Moltmann says, is theodicy's open uestion. pro lem either for the theist or atheist. There is

final solution to the

uestion why evil eschatological uestion. Pannen erg points out that this until the last day. He maintains this issue will e defini will persist pro lem ut only y the action of God not our theoretical arguments, solved, y tively Himself in the future of His Kingdom. ' The uestion, as E. L. Mascall has pointed out, is not whether God created the est of all possi le worlds. Lei ni made a strong logical case for this position in the eighteenth century in his Theodicy. The issue simply is that this is the world God freely chose to create. God is infinite and his ways and reasons for doing things are not entirely comprehensi le to us. God is ultimately a mystery ecause he is infinite wisdom and he transcends our finite, limited capacity for knowing.'' Shall the clay say to the potter, why did you make me like this no

final

or the

answer

to

it, yet

eliever it is

an

one

cannot

get rid of this nagging


The Miracle

Rom. 9:20 . This does

not at all

that

mean

one can

hide

of Atheism

ehind the

7

e cuse

of

mystery and duck the hard intellectual

uestions. Indeed they are to e faced with honesty and candor. But finite reason can only take us so far in developing a thoughtful understanding of our faith. Reason re uires us to admit that the incomprehensive suffering of the world does call into uestion, from an e isten tial emotional standpoint, the e istence of God. In Dostoevsky's The Brothers Karama ov, Ivan challenges his Tell me,

rother

Alyosha:

earnestly, challenge you Imagine creating a fa ric of human destiny with the o ect of making men happy in the end, giving them peace and rest at last, ut that it was essen tial and inevita le to torture to death only one tiny creature a would consent to e the architect on those conditions Tell me, you a y.... and tell the truth. No, I wouldn't consent, said Alyosha softly.''' said Ivan

I

that you

answer.

are

In the final

against

analysis,

faith in God

the

e cept

pro lem for

one

of evil poses insurmounta le evidence history which disarms the attack of

fact of

emotional and rational arguments. Taylor Caldwell has descri ed this fact with therapeutic and theological insight in a ook. The Listener, where she our

num er of persons who pour out their souls to a Eventually these people come to a point of honesty in

descri es tain.

a

grief and pro lems

and

complain itterly against

man

ehind

talking

a cur

a out their

the universe. At that

curtain opens and they see the Author of the universe, not complacency, ut crucified upon the Cross.

point, the standing idly y in

IS GOD-TALK HISTORICALLY DERI ED

development of historical criti Although Christianity is said to e a his torical religion, the 'historical' claims especially a out the life of Christ are not treated as historical, ecause elievers do not apply to them the sort of dou t which would ordinarily apply to historical statements a out any fairly remote epoch. ' What is also apparent is that Mackie does not know that the develop ment of modern critical history took its rise from within Christian theology and critical i hcal studies. And the cutting edge in contemporary theology and i lical studies has een an in-depth and pro ing analysis of the reha ility of It is

cism in

apparent that Mackie did

not know of the

i lical studies when he wrote:

the historical events in the Bi le.

development of the critical historical method, the histori cal elements of the Bi le have een su ected to the most sever and painstaking analysis of any document ever I am reminded of a statement y C. S. Lewis who reported that, during his struggles to defend his atheism, it came as a shock when

Through

the modern

the hardest

oiled of all the atheists I

that the evidence for the

good.

historicity

Of course, C. S. Lewis

was

ever

knew sat in my

led to

a

room.... and

remarked

really surprisingly Gospels thoughtful analysis of the historical

of the

was


Wood

8

claims in the New Testament and

ecame a Christian. His classic treatment of the miraculous foundation of Christian faith is contained in his ook. Miracles. Here he deals with all the philosophical issues and concludes that the issue

primary

a out the truth of Christian faith is historical, not merely philosophical. The central New Testament declaration is that Jesus of Na areth is the histori cal appearance and personal em odiment of God's true eing. This self-revela tion of God

was

of this historical

y Jesus'

made known

occurrence

Christian faith would not e ist. stands in

particularity

meaning of Christian faith. Without it. The decisive significance of this historical event other religions. urther, the Christian attitude

sharp contrast to all importance of historical

toward the

religions religions.

death and resurrection. The

is the decisive

events

separates itself from all non- i lical

which are, in essence, nature religions rather than historically- ased Bi lical scholarship has shown that there is a central core of inter-con

nected events

eginning

with A raham and

continuing down through the for culminating in the history of Jesus. This series of events is called the history of salvation. This history contains a progressive unfolding, developing, and enlightening view of God which reaches its highest point in the declaration, ased on his resurrection from the dead, that Jesus is the mation of the nation of Israel and

Son of God.

Of other

course

there

religions.

are

parallels and similarities etween Christianity and early centuries of the Christian faith, oth Christians

many

rom the

and non-Christians have noted these similarities. But there

are

radical difference

well, and often the similarities are primarily superficial and shallow. ' The really significant difference is the Christian attitude toward history. The as

Christian faith cannot survive for to on

e false

or even

pro a ly

a

moment if its historical claims

false.

or

i lical

religion places

a

can

e shown

high premium

rational evidence and relia le witnesses see 1 Corinthians 15 . If the histori apostolic claims a out Jesus of Na areth were shaky, then intel

cal nature of the lectual

integrity

honesty would not allow us to elieve. This stands in radi religions for whom historical evidence is irrelevant. That is them as having a mythological asis as opposed to the historical and

cal contrast to other

why we

refer to

asis of Christian faith.

What a out the historical evidence

Is it credi le

.

.

Bruce,

now

retired pro

University of Manchester, points out that the evidence of our New Testament writings is ever so much greater than the evi dence for many writings of classical authors, the authenticity of which no-one dreams of uestioning. He goes on to point out that if the New Testament were a collection of secular writings, their authenticity would generally e the New Because all dou t. Testament as is a eyond regarded religious docu ment, people are naturally suspicious of its claims and demand much more cor ro orative evidence for such a work than they would for an ordinary secular or pagan writing. However, Bruce points out, It is a curious fact that historians fessor of

i lical criticism at the


The Miracle

have often

of Atheism

9

een much readier to trust the New Testament records than have

theologians. Why Because of its reports a out miracles. It is perhaps only appropriate then that the most severe test of critical analysis ought to e applied to the i lical record. Bruce writes:

many

But

we

do not

uarrel

with those who want

Testament than for other

writings firstly,

more

evidence for the New

ecause the universal claims

which the New Testament makes upon mankind are so a solute, and the character and works of its chief igure so unparalleled, that we want to e as sure

of its truth

fact there is much ancient To

writings

of

e sure, there

scholars

concerning

as we more

possi ly

can

and

secondly,

ecause in

point

of

evidence for the New Testament than for other

compara le

date.

are differing assessments among contemporary i lical the various historical elements in the Bi le. Many claims

and reports in the Bi le cannot e historically confirmed or disconfirmed. But the main series of events which form the asis of the history of salvation are

open to critical evaluation. It is true that some New Testament scholars do not accept many of these central events as historically relia le accounts. Most nota le is Rudolf Bultmann. But at least Bultmann

Corinthians which go

was

written

y

acknowledges

that 1

Paul around 55 A.D. and that it contains materials

ack much further. He

acknowledges that Paul really elieves that Jesus acknowledged that the physical res urrection of Jesus was really elieved to have happened y the earliest Christian followers. ' Bultmann's re ection of the resurrection is ased on his e istentialist presupposition that assumes a fact-value dichotomy, as if empirical facts have no earing on the ultimate meaning of life. It is easily understanda le, in the light of his espousal of the e istentialist phi losophy of Heidegger, that he would downgrade the importance of this histori cal miracle. And it is unmistaka ly clear that Bultmann's historical udgment was iased against the empirical, historical evidence in favor of his philosophy of e istence. In this respect, Her ert Butterfield, the late professor of modern his tory in the University of Cam ridge, noted that the historical critical method has often overstepped the ounds of common sense as applied to i lical studies. The e cessive skepticism as applied to the New Testament documents y Bultmann led him to declare that the central events, though intended to e historical reports y the earliest Christians, are really mythological ecause of the supernaturalism in which they are enmeshed. ' C. S. Lewis, one of the world's foremost scholars in mythology, comments that to him it is o vious that Bultmann does not understand the nature of myth. If the Gospels are myth, then they are the most unimaginative and poorest kinds of myths which he has ever was

read.

raised from the dead. He further

Lewis writes:


Wood

70

myself, who first seriously read the New Testament when I was, imagina tively and poetically, all agog for the Death and Re- irth patterns tof myth ical religions and an ious to meet a corn-king, was chilled and p u led y the almost total a sence of such ideas in the Christian documents. One moment particularly stood out. A dying God the only dying God who e historical holds that read, is, corn, in His hand says, might possi ly 'This is my ody. '

I

Lewis shows that the

with God

as

mythologically-e pressed desire to en oy fellowship primitive religions of the world ecomes a reality

evidenced in all

history

of Jesus Christ. The decisive difference is that the God of Jesus is the God of nature and the God of history, and not a nature-god. in the

This historical

uality permeates

the

i lical documents. Her ert Butterfield

argues likewise for the inherently historical nature of the New Testament docu ments. He writes: Of course there are some writings so clear in their integrity,

respects, that within their proper realm they could carrying their own self-ratification with them and 1 think that the Gospels. ...must e regarded as elongs to this class. ' ' Of course, in spite of the way that these i lical writings authenticate themselves instanta neously in our minds, Butterfield points out that this is not in itself a sufficient reason for accepting their accuracy from the standpoint of critical history.' Yet, the continuing developments in a critical interpretation of i lical history in the modern world further confirm its general relia ility. In fact, the core events of the history of salvation are so clearly discerni le historically that it is usually philosophical assumptions which produce a negative conclusion rather than the empirical evidence. Apparently Mackie was uninformed of the intensely critical scholarship which has pro ed the depth of this historical uestion. The fact that he can speak of Jesus so unhistorically as eing in the same category as Osiris, Ashtaroth, Dionysus, Baldur, ishnu and Amida reflects how uninformed he is of critical and

so

almost

transparent

in certain

e descri ed

historical matters.'

as

But this failure to understand the nature of the historical

common among atheists. Kail Nielsen also reflects this uality of the historical uality of Christian faith when he understanding superficial writes: Why the Bi le rather than the Koran Why the Bi le rather than the canonical Buddhist te ts Why the Bi le rather than the Hindu te ts Why the Bi le rather than the religious revelations of other people If you look at religion anthropologically, you will see that there are thousands of religions all claiming 'The truth.' ' ' In facL Nielsen says plainly that he cares nothing a out the his

of the Bi le is

of Jesus. No matter what the historical evidence is, there is apparently nothing that would change his mind a out the deity of Jesus.' One of the most pro ing, critical, thorough and informing analysis of the evi dence for Jesus' resurrection as reported in the New Testament documents was

toricity


The Miracle

y

made

one-time

atheist, Wolfhart Pannen erg. In his

of Atheism

ook, Jesus

71

God and

Man, he argues with fairness and rational o ectivity for the historicity of Jesus' resurrection. In a painstaking analysis of the evidence and in dialogue with the est of

higher

i lical criticism which has left no stone unturned in its compre critical hensive, analysis of the evidence Pannen erg shows that the evidence of Jesus' resurrection from the dead is ased on good historical foundations and e understood in

can

continuity

with the view of God

as

developed

in the histo

ry of the nation of Israel. He e amined the intelligi ility of the concept of the urrection itself as it was understood in poste ilic Judaism. '

res

Unfortunately, the most respected atheists in the English-speaking world apparently have not critically e amined the historical claims of the New Testament. Pannen erg noted, in his discussions with Antony lew's atheism, that there is a lack of sophistication in his way of dealing with the i lical lew had argued that in the case of something so unusual as a resur reports. rection from the dead that it re uired evidence considera ly stronger than ordi nary events which we can e perience through normal means. Pannen erg agreed with his premise, and insisted that a critical e amination of the evidence should e persuasive. There are good and even superior reasons for claiming that the Resurrection of Jesus was a historical event, and conse uently the risen Lord him self is a living reality. ' Pannen erg at the same time notes that lew has a good point that our e perience reveals that dead men do not rise again. And so there is natural resistance to

a

consider the evidence for Jesus' resurrection.

even

Conse uently, the de ate will continue no matter what the evidence is.' It is generally assumed, especially in the European Continental discussion, that the uestion of critical history and its relation to Christian faith was given its classic formulation in the nineteenth

Actually,

century writings of Ernst Troeltsch.

uestion also goes eighteenth century. In An In uiry

the modern formulation of the critical historical

ack to David Hume in Scotland in the

Concerning

Human

Understanding, Hume impossi le for

which will forever make it miracles. '

claims he discovered

any

thoughtful

an

person to

argument elieve in

develops and Mackie follows up on, articulates personal e perience is our only guide in important points. what is a true happening in the world. What is normal and custom determining ary according to our own e periences is the foundation for making udgments concerning past events. Second, a thoughtful person will proportion their faith to the evidence. There are degrees of pro a ility concerning what is to e elieved, and we must critically assess all the known facts in esta hshing what is This

argument which

some

to

us

e

elieved.

In

applying

to

these

accept what

Hume

irsL

our own

principles,

someone

Hume

else tells

nature inclined to tell the truth and

e plains

us

that it is

a out their

our

capacity

common

and natural for

past e periences.

We

are

y

to remem er is tenacious. Of


Wood

72

course, a person who is dehrious or noted for telhng falsehoods is easily discred ited. But, generally speaking, we assume that people speak the truth, Hume notes. ' What would cause us not to accept the testimony of someone Only if

e perience and o servation, that the per testimony which would cause us to uestion uestions a out the character of the their not e person sufficiently corro orated y other witnesses testimony may the manner of their testimony may raise uestions they may not e hi it suffi cient confidence in what they are reporting as a genuine happening they may give the appearance of eing too confident in what they report. More specifical ly, if their report contains e traordinary or marvelous occurrences which are counter to our own personal e periences, then we rightly are suspicious of their testimony. In these cases, we re uire a more stringent proof and are inclined not to elieve the report, since it would e contrary to customary e periences.

we were son was

convinced, ased

on our own

mistaken. There may e contrary their report there may e serious

A miracle is a violation of the laws of nature, Hume definition, By argues, a miracle is contrary to the uniform of all it would not e called a miracle. It is no Otherwise, e perience people. But what a out miracles

Hume writes. miracle that

should

a

come

eing rought

person should die suddenly, ut it is a miracle that a dead ack to life, if he really had died. Can such a report of a dead ack to life

e

accepted

man man

relia le

testimony must consider which alternative is the uestion, more pro a le. Is the testimony given y someone with such compelling integrity that the likelihood of the testimony eing true is greater than the likelihood of the that the event eing false In other words, which would e the greater miracle If the falsehood of his witness is mistaken, or that the event really happened testimony would e more miraculous than the event which he relates, then, and not till then, can he pretend to command my elief or opinion. ' This is the main argument against miracles and against the pro a ility that a To

answer

this

as a

Hume says

we

historical revelation of God could have occurred. It is this

argument which

Hume

says he flatters himself to have discovered. ' The laws of nature are ased on the principle of cause and effect. This principle is uniformly esta lished according

e perience and o servation. It would e a miracle if this law were inter suspended. At the same time, if the report of a highly credi le wit e false so that if the witness were mistaken it would con ness is most unlikely to stitute a miracle, then we have reached an impasse. At est there e ists a mutual destruction of arguments, so that one miracle cancels out the other.' Still, then, there is no asis for elieving that a dead man can come ack to life. To e sure, Hume did allow that one could e e pected to elieve in miracles if the falsehood of a witness would e a greater miracle than the actual physical miracle itself ut he offers other supportive reasons why miracles are impossi le which together create an accumulative effect which makes it fairly certain that no witness could e called forth to convince one of a miracle really happening. ' to our

fered with and


The Miracle

of Atheism

73

Mackie thinks Hume's reasoning is conclusive. There is no way then to accept the resurrection of Jesus there is no need to consider the pro a ilities of the event since the most that could e e pected to e derived out of a painstaking

critical

analysis

of the historical evidence would

e

an

impasse.

What Mackie failed to reckon with is that, in spite of the numerous attempts which have een made to e plain the miracle of the resurrection away, each

attempt has een unconvincing. All critical scholarship accepts the fact that the earliest disciples elieved that Jesus was physically raised from the dead, and no

e planation esides the one given in the New Testament has een successful in determining why the disciples came to their conclusion. In the nineteenth century, David Strauss pointed out that all attempts y theo logically li eral scholars to write a life of Jesus were failures ecause their pre sentations of Jesus were even less credi le than the miraculous e planation given in the gospel. His own e planation that the mythical thinking of the firstcentury elievers

is the est way to account for Jesus' resurrection has also een discredited and makes the New Testament witness even more credi le. or as

Jaspers has pointed out in discussions with Rudolf Bultmann, it is histori cally inaccurate to udge the first-century as possessing a mythical mentality any more than the modern world. They, too, knew that dead men did not rise again. ' Mackie fails to provide any further solution to this dilemma. It is perfectly in order to try to e plain the resurrection in a natural way, if that is what the evi dence re uires. To date, any e planation for the elief of the earliest disciples in Jesus' resurrection has not een forthcoming which carries any degree of crediihty other than the miraculous one provided y the witnesses of lesus.' That Karl

and the appearances of the risen Lord to the most severe test which can e given y the to the stand disciples up historically critical historical method, and elievers have sufficient and highly pro a le rea

is, the tradition of the empty tom

affirming with intellectual integrity the historical foundation of their self-revealing action of God in Jesus was not performed secretly in a corner, ut was done so pu licly that Paul was sure King Agrippa could have e amined the evidence for himself Acts 2 :2 . Likewise, we today have that same opportunity. We can say Yes to Hume, that ased on the empirical evidence, along with the credi ility of the original witnesses, it would e a greater miracle that the New Testament witnesses were wrong than that the resurrection event itself actually sons

faith.

for

or the

happened.

CONCLUSION have noted, Mackie pursues Hume's skepticism into a full- lown athe ism. The cumulative effect of all the non-deductive evidence, Mackie thinks, is in favor of an atheistic position. The conclusion here is ust the As

we

heavily weighted


Wood

74

perception that the nature of Christian theism is rationally coherent, ethically e emplary, psychologically healthy-minded and historically opposite.

It is my

relia le and true. Each of us, of course, must make a decision for ourselves ased on the larger ody of evidence. The finally convincing proof for a Christian

eliever, however,

is to e perience the life-transforming grace of God as mediat through a personal relationship with the risen Lord 1 lohn 5:20 . This is not a mere pietistic platitude, ut a frank acknowledgement that one must e perience the reality for oneself to know for sure.

ed

NOTES

In uiry Concerning Human Understanding, edited with an introduction y Indianapolis: Bo s-Merrill, Inc., 1955 . 2. lohn Passmore, Logical Positivism, in The Encyclopedia of Philosophy, Paul Edwards London: Collier-Macmillan, 19 7 , 5:5 Antony lew, An Introduction to Western York: New Bo s-Merrill, Inc., 1971 , p. 385. Philosophy 3. A. L Ayer, Language, Truth, and Logic New York: Dover Pu Ucations, Inc. 194 , pp. 35ff. 4. lohn Passmore, Logical Positivism. 5. Ludwig Wittgenstein, Tractatus Logico-Philosophicus, trans. C. K. Ogden London: Routledge and Kegan Paul, 1922 , pp. 77-189 A. . Ayer, Language, Truth, and Logic, p. 1 lohn Passmore, A Hundred Years of Philosophy New York: Macmillan, 1957 , p. 394. . John Passmore, A Hundred Years of Philosophy p. 392. 7. J. L. Mackie, The Miracle of Theism O ford: Clarendon Press, 1982 , p. 2. Cf. Richard Swin urne, The Coherence of Theism O ford: Clarendon Press, 1977 , p. 22ff. 1. David Hume, An

Charles W. Hendel

,

8.

J.

P. Moreland and Kai

1990 , p. 78.

9. Hume

19

on

Religion,

Nielsen, Does God E ist

selected and introduced

Nashville: Thomas Nelson Pu hshers,

y

Richard Wollheim

London: Collins,

, pp. 17, 22, 28. 10. Helmut ThieHcke, Nihilism, trans. John W. Do erstein Westport, Cormecticut: 19 9 , p.2. 11. Mackie,r e Miracle of Theism, p. 3. 12. I id., pp. 3-4. 13. Swin urne, The Coherence of Theism, p. 1. 14. Daniel Day Williams, Contemporary American Philosophy, ed. lohn E. Smith New York: Humanities Press, Inc., 1970 , p. 231. 15. Mackie,The Miracle of Theism, p. 230. 1 . I id., pp. 2,4. 17. I id., p. 2. 18. I id., p. 2. 19. Moreland and Nielson, pp. 7 -77. 20. Mackie, The Miracle of Theism, p.5.


The Miracle

of Atheism

75

21. I id., p. 2. 22. Bertrand Russell,

History of Western Philosophy London: George Allen and Unwin Ltd., 194 , p. 700. 23. Mackie, The Miracle of Theism, p. 4. 24. Hume, In uiry, pp. 122-123. 25. I id., pp. 72-89. 2 . Kant, Prolegomena to any uture Metaphysics Indianapolis: Bo s-Merrill, Inc., 1950 , p. 8. 27. Mackie, The Miracle of Theism, p. 82. 28. I id., pp. 13-29. 29. I id., pp.8 -87. 30. I id., p. 7. 31. I id., p. 198. 32. Cf. William Lyons, Emotion Cam ridge: Cam ridge University Press, 1980 , pp. 33-52. 33. inancial Times August 22, 1992 , p. 1 . 34. Hein Cassirer, Grace and Law Grand Rapids: Wm. B. Eerdmans Pu lishing Co., 1988 , p.

35. 3 . 37

38. 39.

iii.

I I I I I

id., id., id., id., id.,

pp. p.

iii- iv. iv.

p. 1 7.

p. 1 7. p. 1 8.

Scientific Man New York: ISH Pu lications, 1977 , p. 31 . Hume, In uiry, p. 189 . I id., p. 194. Russell, Western Philosophy, p. 98. Hume, In uiry, p. 194. cf. Wollheim, Introduction, Hume on Religion, p. 28. Mackie, The Miracle of Theism, pp. 187-21 . Pannen erg, Basic uestions in Theology, trans. George H. Kehm London: SCM Press,

40. Enrico Cantore, 41. 42.

43. 44.

45. 4 . 47.

Ltd., 1971 , pp. 184-185. 48. Paul Tillich, A History of Christian Thought, ed. Carl E. Braaten New York: Harper and Row, 1972 , p. 435. 49. Mackie, The Miracle of Theism, p.l98. 50. I id., p. 8. 51. Karl lung. Memories, Dreams, Reflections, recorded and edited y Aniela loffe, trans. Richard and Clara Winston New York: Pantheon Books, 19 1 , pp. 147-1 7. 52. Gordon Allport, The Individual and His Religion New York: Macmillan, 1950 , p. 23.

53. I id., p. 142. 54. Mackie, The Miracle of Theism, 55. Hume, In uiry, pp. 193-194.

p.24 .

5 . Thielicke, Nihilism, p. 1 5.

57

I id., p. 1 5.

58. Hans

Kung, Does

God E ist , trans. Edward

uinn New York:

intage Books, 1981 , p. 470.

59. Mackie, The Miracle of Theism, pp. 24 -247. 0. Paul TiUich, Systematic Theology University of Chicago, 1951 , 1:113. 1. C. S. Lewis, Mere Christianity New York: Macmillan, 1952 , p. 120.


Wood

7

2.

Mackie, The Miracle of Theism, pp. 183, 192.

3. Tillich, 4. Hume,

Courage to In uiry, p.

Be New Haven: Yale

10.

University Press, 1952 ,

pp. 32- 3.

5. I id., p. 11. . I id., p. 10.

7. Martin Heidegger, Being and Time, trans. lohn Mac uarrie and Edward Ro inson London: SCM Press Ltd., 19 2 , pp. 231ff. 8. Mackie, The Miracle of Theism, p. 19 . 9. Laurens van der Post, Jung and the Story of Our Time New York: Pantheon Books, 1975 , p 141. 70. lung. Memories, Dreams, Reflections, pp. 1 7. 71. I id., p. 1 7. 72. I id., p. 152. 73. van der Post, lung, p. 143. 74. I id.

75. I id., p. 153. 7 . Paul it , Sigmund 77. I id.

78. Karen

Horney,

W. W. Norton and

reud's Christian Unconscious New York: Guilford Press, 1988 , p. 221.

Our Inner

Conflicts

in The Collected Works

Co., Inc., 1945 , 1:13.

of Karen Horney New

I id., pp. 73ff. rank Lake, Clinical Theology London: Darton, Longman and Todd, 19 , p. 570. 81. Horney, Collected Works, 1:82. 82. Lake, Clinical Theology, p. 710 83. I id., p. 98. 84. Horney, Collected Works, 1:49-50. 85. Lake, Clinical Theology, p. 98. 8 . Horney, Collected Works, 1:83-84. 87. I id., 1:89. 88. I id., 1:75. 89. Cf. Lake, Clinical Theology, pp. 593-594. 90. Mackie, The Miracle of Theism, p. 203. 91 Lake, Clinical Theology, p. 597. 92. I id., p. 555. 93. I id., p. 934. 94. I id., p. 180. 95. lung. Memories, Dreams, and Reflections, p. 144. 9 . Lake, Clinical Theology, p. 0 . 97. I id., p. 599. 98. I id., p. 590-591. 99. Cited in Moreland and Nielsen, Does God E ist , p. 1 7. 100. Her ert Butterfield, Christianity and History London: Collins, 19 7 , p. 150. 101. Mackie, The Miracle of Theism, p. 199. 102. Hume, In uiry, p. 140. 103. Moreland and Nielsen, Does God E ist , p. 79. 104. Mackie The Miracle of Theism, p. 257. 79.

80.

.

,

York:


The Miracle

o

Atheism

77

105. I id., p. 258. 10 . I id., p. 257.

107. I id., p. 259. 108. Horney on 1 Corinthians 13. 109. Patrick

Sherry, Spirit, Saints,

York Press, 1984 . 110. Mackie, The Miracle

111. C.S. Lewis, Miracles

112.

Horney,

of Theism,

and

Immortality Al any,

NY: State

of New

pp. 259-2 0.

New York: MacmiUan, 1972 , pp. 173-174.

Collected Works, 1: 12-13. Kerygma and Myth, ed. Hans W. Bartsch, trans. R.H.

113. Bultmann,

and Row, 19 2 , 2:2 , 27, 33. 114. Cf. Wolfhart Pannen erg, lesus

Harper

University

uller

New York:

God and Man, trans. Lewis L. Wilkins and Duane A.

Philadelphia:

Westminster Press, 1977 , p. 84. 115. Erich romm, The Art of Loving New York: Harper and Row, 19 3 , pp. 53- 9. 11 . Mackie, The Miracle of Theism, p. 17 .

Prie e

117.

Theta Phi Panel Discussion with Wolfhart

Journal 4 aU 1991 :20-21. 118. lurgen Moltmann, The Trinity York: Harper and Row, 1980 , p 49. 119.

and the

Pannen erg,

Kingdom of God,

The

trans.

As ury Theological

Margaret

Kohl

New

Pannen erg,

Panel Discussion, p. 20. Mascall, He Who Is Hamden, Connecticut: Archon Books, 1970 , p. 104. yodor Dostoevsky, The Brothers Karama ov, trans. Constance Garnett New York:

120. E. L. 121.

DeU , p. 180. 122. Mackie, The Miracle of Theism, p. 218. 123. Ernst Cassirer, The Philosophy of the Enlightenment, trans. rit C. A. KoelLn and lames P. Pettegrove Princeton: Princeton University Press, 1951 , pp. 201ff. 124. C.S. Lewis, Surprised y loy New York: Harcourt, Brace and World, Inc., 1955 , p. 223. 125. Pannen erg, lesus God and Man, pp. 91-92. 12 . . . Bruce, The New Testament Documents London: Intervarsity Press, 19 5 , p. 15. 127. Bultmarm, Theology of the New Testament, trans. Kendrick Gro el New York: Charles Scri ner's Sons, 1955 , p. 295. 128. Butterfield, Christianity and History, p. 28 129. Bultmann, Kerygma and Myth, pp. 9-1 . 130. C. S. Lewis, Christian Reflections Grand Rapids: Wm. B. Eerdmans, 19 7 , p. 154. 131. Lewis, The Miracle of Miracles, p. 118. 132. Butterfield, Christianity and History, p. 1 2-1 3. 133. I id., p. 1 3. 134. Mackie, The Miracle of Theism, p. 182. 135. Moreland and Nielsen, Does God E ist , p. 7. 13 . I id., p. 137. Pannen

138.

Gary

.

erg, lesus

God and Man, pp. 74-88. Antony lew, Did lesus Rise

Ha ermas and

New York: Harper and Row, 1987 , p. 127.

139.

I id.,pp.

134-135.

140. I id., p. 135. 141. Hume, In uiry, p. 118.

from

the Dead

ed.

Terry

L. Miethe


Wood

78

142. 143. 144. 145. 14 . 147.

I I I I I I

id., id., id., id., id., id.,

pp. 118-120. p. 122.

p. 124.

p.ll8.

p. 123.

pp. 124-141.

148. David

. Strauss, The

Life of Jesus Critically E amined,

Swan Sonnenschein and Co, 190 , p. . 149. Bultmann, Kerygma and Myth, 2:134-13 . 150.

Pannen erg, Jesus

God and Man, pp. 95-9 .

trans.

George

Eliot

London:


Reflections On Some

Theologico-Ethical Norms Prison Ministry

or

Rufus Burrow

SOME GENERAL RE LECTIONS Inasmuch

as my reflections are informed y the asic tenets of personalism, the e.g., principle of the inherenL intrinsic worth of persons, it might e said that this essay is a personalistic reflection on some theological and ethical norms for

prison ministry. Or, ecause I am also influenced y the asic principles of li er ation theology, e.g., the total li eration and empowerment of people forced to the margins of society, it might also e said that this is a ird's-eye view of how one African American li eration ethicist thinks a out the tragedy that is the American penal system and the general failure of professedly Christian peoples and their institutions to respond with a sense of moral outrage and urgency oth ver ally and su stantively. Either way, this essay intends to address two ues tions: What are some of the fundamental norms that ought to inform the theo logical social ethicist' s and prison minister's thinking a out prison ministry What are some implications of these norms Before e plicitly addressing these uestions I want to make several preliminary comments. Many churches already engage in what they too confidently fancy to e prison ministry. Generally this tends to mean little more than a weekly or monthly visit to the local ail or prison facility to hold a service and pass out tracts. My intention is not to e unduly critical of such efforts, since they may produce some good, however minuscule. Indeed, the Bi le commands that we visit those in prison, ut does not give us a recipe to follow once we get there. It does not tell us what to do and how est to do it. However, a asic point that we

Rufus

Burrow is

Indianapolis,

an

Associate

Indiana.

Professor of Church

The As ury Theological Journal

and

Society at

Christian

ol. 47 No. 2

Theology Seminary

in

all 1992


80

Burrow

often

forget is gospel

of the

prison or

that

we are

as we

and to those

e ample,

if

to

use some common sense

est

consider

prisoners

we

and

e

guided y

possi le

who have

remem er that

the

spirit

ways of ministering with those in een returned to the community.

regardless

we are

of race,

gender, class,

age and health one people united y the will and love of the One God who has im ued us with the divine image, it should not e difficult to see that a weekly

study at the local ail or prison is only the are mini prison ministry should e. However, if we conclude from our of the reading Scriptures that a asic insight therein is that of the interrelatedness and interdependence of all persons in Love God , then it must occur to us that what is happening to our sister or rother at any given time is also happen ing to us. But even more, it is happening to the God who creates and sustains us.

or

monthly

mum

sermon or

Bi le

of what

Therefore, when

I think a out

much a out

and God

prison ministry,

those who

I know that such

ministry

is

as

ars and those who

ehind

prison society. What I am suggesting is that any efforts at prison ministry or any ministry, for that matter are ased on spoken or unspoken theological and ethical or norms. That is, assumptions prison ministry is very much linked to our idea

have

me

as

een released into the wider

prison

are

of this

of God, God's relation to human persons and the world, and our relation to God and each other in God's world. The serious Christian, Jew, Muslim, etc., must e

theologico-ethical assumptions and consider the imphcaprison ministry that are relevant to the magnitude of the tragedy that confronts us today this offers a radical and creative vision of new ways of think ing a out prison ministry that are consistent with Jesus' proclamation that the Kingdom of God is at hand right now. If one of our assumptions is that God created the world and us, set all things clear a out her

or

his

tions for

motion, and then

in

plate not really

went off into

thoughts

divine

care

a out

some

that God is little us

and the world

distant

more

part of the

than

a

universe to contem

distant

this will have

a

spectator

profound

who does

effect

on

the

think a out and engage in prison ministry. If we cannot see how we are way connected with God, each other and the world, we may well conclude that an we

ethic of individualism is the most

is

distant

a

spectator implies

we can

achieve. Since the

that God does not

care

assumption

a out

us

that God

and the world,

Why not consistently do whatever is necessary to promote our own individual good at the e pense of whoever and whatever gets in our way Or, if one of our asic assumptions is that God, although the creator of all per sons, estows une ual portions of God's image, it would e easy to conclude

why

should we

a respecter of persons that God loves and values some persons or groups more than others. And if this is so with God, why not with us Indeed, this seems to e one of the asic assumptions that informs the way many pro

that God is

fessed Christians think a out for

e ample,

do not appear

prison ministry. Many Euro- American Christians, particularly alarmed that nearly fifty percent of the


Reflections

on

Some

Theologico-Ethical

Norms

for Prison Ministry

81

total

prison population in this country are African American men. This is an e or itant percentage in hght of the fact that lacks comprise ut twelve percent of the nation's population. In addition, the middle, managerial and corporate classes of all

races

in this

those in the

society

are

not

especially

distur ed that the

ma ority

of

the poor. Indeed, as Clarence Darrow said in his penal system classic Address to the Prisoners in the Cook County Jail 1902 , irst and last, are

people are sent to ail ecause they are poor. ' Historically there have een e ceptions to this claim, ut they have een few indeed when we consider the num er of poor people incarcerated. If

that God is somehow

a respecter of persons and thinks more of than will this affect oth the way we think a out another, person group and do prison ministry, as well as who we think should e imprisoned. It is we assume or

one

imperative that all who claim to e called to ministry make a concerted, decided effort to identify the operative assumptions or norms in their thinking a out prison and other types of ministry. I

now

want to propose, in outline

form, several of the fundamental

norms

that

inform my

thinking a out prison ministry. But in order for these to receive the ma imum radicali ing effect, it is important to o serve that they must e guided y ideal conceptions which condition their application. ' These are three: the highest conceiva le estimate of the worth and destiny of persons the highest possi le conception of the value of the plant and animal kingdom and a general theory of reality and conception of God which ade uately grounds the intrinsic worth of persons first and foremost.

ACTORS WHICH CONDITION AND MORALI E ETHICAL PRINCIPLES What

we

think a out the worth of persons, nature and the animal kingdom we treat them. If our estimate of their worth

will have much to do with the way is low, we will generally treat them

accordingly. We cannot, in all honesty, claim life forms and the environment, for e ample, while other respect persons, and maliciously selfishly demeaning or destroying them for economic or other to

gain.

That the environment is

eing decimated,

that various mem ers of the ani

threatened with e tinction, is evidence enough that many per kingdom sons of their worth. low estimates possess e lovers of humanity and respecters of we cannot honestly claim to Similarly, mal

are

the inherent sacredness and inviola le worth of all persons when we imply through our actions that the worth of women is less than that of men. That lack,

rown and red

a

peoples

and the poor in this

conception

of their

it is we, human

country

continue to

e

rutali ed

on

privileged very low to think, al eit mistakenly, that

and

powerful dignity and worth. We seem eings, who have the power to determine

massive scale is indicative that the

have

a

the essential worth of

particular groups of persons and other forms of e istence. We fail to understand that the most we can do in this regard is to pass value udgments on the worth of


82

Burrow

particular persons and groups. This is why we need that other conditioning fac tor: namely, a theory of reality and God that ade uately grounds the ideals of the dignity and worth of persons as such. At any rate, it should e pointed out that a high conception of the value and worth of persons and the animal and plant kingdoms will generally result in corresponding ehavior toward them. The personalist, Borden P. Bowne 1847-1910 , saw clearly that if one possess es a

low estimate of the worth of persons it is conceiva le that she or he may ver espouse the highest ethical principles e.g., love, ustice and righteousness ,

ally

simultaneously e hi iting disrespect for others. This, he elieved, was the ma or pro lem with oth Plato and Aristotle. After praising their ethical sys tems, Bowne concluded that oth men held a low conception of the essential while

value of persons as such. Plato, for e ample, saw no contradiction etween his ethical system and his support of infanticide and the killing of the elderly and on the other hand, saw nothing wrong with human slavery. The trou le in these cases, Bowne wrote, was not in their ethical insight, ut in their philosophy of man, or in their conception of the worth and destiny of the

helpless. Aristotle, human

person.

tice if she

or

one espouses principles of love and us highest possi le ideal of the dignity of the to condition ethical principles in order to

It does not matter that

he does not adhere to the

person. Such a conception is needed insure the est possi le treatment of persons. In addition, our theory of reality or conception of God is

e tremely important conditioning factor. Through an ade uate doctrine of God we can effectively ground the norms of good will and respect toward persons e ual rights for all persons preferential option for the least or marginated and the interdependence and interrelatedness of persons in community. In other words, an ade uate con ception of God gives us grounds for possessing the highest possi le estimate of the worth of persons and other aspects of creation. Such a conception of God allows us to see the unity of all persons in God, ut in such a way that no created person loses her or his individuality which is necessary to guarantee their sense of freedom. We find plenty of support for this view in the Scriptures. Cain Hope elder points to this in his discussion of the law of love in the New Testament in reference to the neigh or. elder shows that the nine references to love with respect to the neigh or in the New Testament refer to another human eing, irrespective of the person's race or class, and, in some instances, of gender. He finds this to e particularly the case in the Gospel of Luke. Luke's hermeneutic is noteworthy, ecause the clear implication is that one's neigh or is not necessarily one's fellow Christian. The neigh or may e one who is outside the Christian community. This implies a kind of unity or interrelatedness of all persons, with God at the center. And of course there is that profound passage in Galatians where Paul reminds us that in as a

Christ there is neither Jew, Greek, slave, free, male Christ Jesus 3:28 .

or

female, for all

are one

in


Reflections

on

Some

Theologico-Ethical

Charles Hartshorne takes the idea of the

heights, making or as

it clear

that, ased

on

this

Norms

for Prision Ministry

83

of all persons in God to new conception of God, whatever is done oneness

not done to any mem er is not only done or not done to all others, ut to God well. This is similar to Jesus' criterion for the last udgment in Matt. 25:31-4

where he esta lishes that what

rethren he will take

chief criterion for

as

done

we or

do

or

fail to do to the least of the sisters and

not done to Him.

the

This, He proclaimed, is the implies Jesus' total commit

entering Kingdom. solidarity with those counted among the least. Hartshorne contends that God's love is much deeper than enevolence or well-wishing. At ottom it is sympathy, taking into itself our every grief. It is God in solidarity with the sufferings and oys of persons through a feeling of sympathetic identity. When the homeless are seeking shelter, it is not merely they who seek shelter. When those imprisoned in the penal system and others in the society are crying out for ustice and the right and opportunity to live fully human lives, it is not they alone who cry out. When African Americans, Hispanics and Native Americans demand total li eration and empowerment, it is not merely they who do so. Rather, in every case it is the very God of the uni verse who cries for ustice and comprehensive empowerment. As if writing a on the Gospels, Hartshorne says: commentary All of this

ment and

sonship to God we may a stractly admit, is not ust a product of divine power, or ust an o ect of divine well-wishing, ut a very fragment of the life of God which is made allinclusive through sympathy. We ourselves are valua le only ecause we, too, are caught in the same unity of love. Men seem outside each other, and they imagine they are all outside God.. ..All is within the divine sympathy. We are mem ers of one another ecause we are mem ers of the living whole, ound together y solidarity of feeling, a solidarity imperfect in us ut perfect and we even inconvenience our fellows, we inconvenience God if a solute in God. we torture our fellows, we torture God as used to e said, we re-crucify Jesus....' emphasis added That other fellow of whatever social class whose

All persons are so related and connected through God's sympathy that any in ustice done to any one of us is an in ustice done to each other and to God. Such a of God provides ade uate warrant for the four norms that shape

conception thinking a

my

out

prison ministry.

SOME THEOLOGICAL-ETHICAL NORMS The

that

guide

OR PRISON MINISTRY

my thinking a out ministry with pris rooted deeply in African American and

assumptions e -prisoners in this society are Jewish-Christian thoughL and undergirded y the long-neglected philosophy and ethics of personahsm. Although strands of personahsm date ack to ancient African, Oriental and Greek thought, this particular world-view, way of life, and oners

and

or norms


84

Burrow

living together in formulation y a

the world

was

given

its most

mem er of the Methodist

systematic and methodological Episcopal Church, Borden Parker

egan formulating this philosophy efore he was called to University in 187 as professor of philosophy and the first dean of the Graduate School. By 1907 he was a confessed personalist. Indeed, in a letter to his wife on May 31, 1909, he said: I am a Personalist, the first of the clan in any thoroughgoing sense. Personalism is any philosophy for which the person is the dominant reality and the only intrinsic value. In other words, personalism holds that reality is personal and persons have infinite dignity and worth. Although there are at least eleven types of personalism, and not all personalists have een theists,' the type that informs my thinking most is profoundly theistic, freedomistic and empirical its method is synoptic and analytic its criterion of truth is growing empirical coherence, and its theory of knowledge is activistic and dualistic. This is personalism in its most typical and theistic form. Were I to continue this hne of thought we would see that there are numerous affinities etween personahsm Bowne. Bowne Boston

and the

eliefs of the Christian faith.

asic

a

ma or

ook

on

third-generation personalist theologian, wrote ustice attempt to develop ethical norms

1905-198 ,

L. Harold DeWolf

crime and

a

in 1975. In his

ustice, DeWolf considered the asic ethical truths of lewish. Christian philosophical traditions to determine whether a useful consensus e reached. After considering each tradition, he suggests the following as may norms to e used as criteria for determining the ethical accepta ility of a given philosophy of criminal ustice: 1 Consistency in the su stance and procedures of the law 2 Benevolent good will and respect toward all persons 3 E ual rights for all persons 4 Presumption of innocence 5 Special care to protect the least, the poor, the weak and the unpopular from unfair treatment Restoration of when and individuals for the com of all 7 Responsi ility community disrupted I think it reasona le to several for of these norms munity. any ade appropriate a out I will not with concern uate thinking prison ministry. myself policy and of I think will e evident some of these these, although practical implications from the discussion of the norms or assumptions to e considered. of criminal

and secular

or my purpose at least four norms must inform our thinking a out and engagement in prison ministry whether with those imprisoned or with those

released to continue will and

struggling

1 Good 2 E ual Rights for all persons 3

to find wholeness in life. These include:

respect toward all persons

Preferential

option for the well- eing and protection of the systematically, mas sively oppressed and 4 The interdependence and interrelatedness of persons, and conse uently the primacy of persons in community. Good Will And There have

Respect een

Toward All Persons

periods

in American

history

when African Americans and


Reflections

Native Americans were a

thought

to

on

were

e

Some

not

considered

su persons

view is inconsistent with

in the

Theologico-Ethical

with

oth the

y

Norms

for Prison Ministry

w hites to

e persons. At

85

est

they

ackward, inferior cuhures. Ahhough such

asic

Jewish-Christian tradition, there

principles

have

een

of

personalism

and the

est

proponents of these who have

held such truncated views. At any rate, I underscore all in this first norm ecause it is important that we recogni e that those who truly elieve that there is one Creator who im ues sons

not

a

us

select few

with the divine

have infinite

image,

dignity

can

only

and worth

conclude that all per they are created

ecause

y God. God is therefore no respecter of persons. God loves us all, although God, like our earthly parents, knows that we have different needs. As

and loved

God is not selective a out who to love, we are not to e selective. To the e tent that Christians claim to e recipients of God's grace and love, we have no choice in who we will love. If we have truly surrendered ourselves to

re uires of us, namely to love and respect one are no e ceptions. By virtue of their humanity unconditionally. in we owe the of God them, imprisoned unconditional love and image

God,

we

and the

respect

will do what God

There

another

as

well.

insightful an rwhere

One of Bowne's most

statements

was

that whenever and wherever

in the universe, they owe each other good will any two persons meet and respect as a matter of course. It does not matter what is their race,

class, age, health

or

prison

record. This

principle

of

gender,

respect for the inherent dig

sacredness of persons is ased on elief in God as Creator and Sustainer of all persons. Into the nostrils of every person God reathes the fragrance of the divine.

nity and

Ec ual Rights or All Persons Here again I underscore all. As elievers of whatever religious persuasion, we cannot pick and choose those for whom we will work to ensure e ual rights. The highest conceiva le estimate of the worth of persons, and our faith in the God in whom we live and move and have our eing, re uires that we appropriate and apply the norm of e ual rights on ehalf of all persons. Preferential Option or The Least This is the point where traditional conservative and many li eral elievers feel they must part company with li eration ethicists. It is difficult for them to under stand how a God who has created all persons in God's image and loves all can have a preferential option for the poor and the oppressed, and conse uently that we are re uired to do the same. If Jesus did not have what amounts to a prefer ential option for the poor, imprisoned, the widow and the orphan, it is difficult to understand why He went to such great lengths to make it clear that the mis treatment of these will e taken as mistreatment of Himself. Indeed, why would Jesus Christ focus in His inaugural address on preaching the gospel to the poor.


8

Burrow

healing sight to

the

rokenhearted, preaching deliverance them that

to the

captives, recovering of oppressed, if these did not

li erty setting special endearment to Him Luke 4:18-19 That the gospel proclaims a preferential option for the poor and oppressed is loved any does not mean that the rest of humanity including oppressors less y God. Peruvian priest and li eration theologian, Gustavo Gutierre , tells us that Preference for the poor is written into the gospel message itself, and that it is precisely this preference that makes the gospel so hard and demanding for the privileged mem ers of an un ust social order. Reflecting on the Pue la Conference held in 1979, Gutierre points out ust as uickly that -preference does not imply e clusivity, i.e., that God loves the poor and oppressed e clusively. Rather, the emphasis is on the special place the poor have in the message of the Bi le and in the life and teaching of Jesus and the position they ought, therefore, to occupy among those who consider themselves His disciples. Although St. Irenaeus was right when he said, The glory of God is the living person, the late Arch ishop Oscar Romero added a special emphasis that makes the point of this third norm: The glory of God is the living poor person ' emphasis added . Indeed, when empirical o servation reveals that certain groups are systematical ly mistreated and eaten to the ground, this would seem to further legitimi e Romero's emphasis. DeWolf admonishes that the only way to conform to the norm of e ual rights for all persons is to take special measures to give such groups a fighting chance to live fully human lives and all that that re uires. Otherwise the norm of e ual rights for all persons is a mockery.

have

the

lind and

at

are

some

Primacy Of Persons-In-Community een norm is more important than at first appears. It has already will and in norms one and two, i.e., toward all e ual good persons, implied rights for all persons. In addition, the conception of God referred to earlier has o vious relational and communal overtones. According to the conception of God discussed earlier, there is an ine trica le interdependence etween God, created persons and the rest of creation. Nels erre a third-generation personalist, held that the very stuff of reality is social. According to erre, the origin, content The

This final

and function of consciousness must

never

e treated

as

are

social in nature.

Therefore, the individual

he e ists in isolation, ut in the conte t of her Edgar S. Brightman held that reality is a society of

if she

or

community.'' Similarly, interacting and communicating or

his

these instances

we see a

In each of persons united y the will of God.' focus on the communal or relational nature of strong

reality and the person. Although the eighth-century prophets made the nation rather than the indi vidual the asic moral unit, implicit in many of their proclamations was a fun damental respect for the individual. Surely we can see this in Amo's denuncia tion of social in ustice. In any event, we can surely say that Jesus went eyond


Reflections

the

prophets

on

Some

Theologico-Ethical

Norms for Prison

87

Ministry

in the

emphasis he placed on the individual and human values.'' community without persons. But conversely, we may not hope for full- lown persons without community. Personahsm at its est stresses the idea of persons-in-community, a term populari ed in the work of Walter G.

There

e

can

no

Muelder.'

asic

A

theologico-philosophical concept

this idea of the

of the African world-view captures

primacy of persons-in-community, relationality or community very well. Re ecting Descarte's statement, Cogito ergo sum I think, therefore I am , with its focus on the individual, Africans prefer to say, Cognatus ergo I am related y lood, therefore I e ist, or I e ist ecause I sum elong to a family.' Or, stated differently, I am, ecause we are. The emphasis in African thought is unmistaka ly on community rather than isolated individuals. Indeed, Ga riel Setiloane contends that in African tradition community is the very essence of eing emphasis added . The entirety of the African world-view stands on the principle that 'You cannot e human alone.' Motho ke motho ka atho: Our humanity finds fulfillment only in community with others. ' Arch ishop Desmond Tutu contends that this same principle is pervasive in the Scriptures. According to the Bi le, he said, a human eing can e a human eing only ecause he elongs to a community. A person is a person through other persons.... If we take this norm seriously we must see that not only are all persons responsi le for the community, ut the community is responsi le for each indi vidual. I am ecause we are we are ecause I am. This norm is right in line with the conception of God noted earlier. The emphasis on community and interde pendence means that whatever happens to one mem er happens to all. If one is imprisoned un ustly or ecause of e traneous socio-economic circumstances not under one's control, we are all imprisoned. Do we not see this idea e pressed in He . 13:3 Here the original Greek reads: Remem er those in prison, for you are prisoners with them yourselves emphasis added . This is so ecause of God's radical love, sympathy and solidarity with us. Therefore, any denial of our sis terhood and rotherhood our relatedness with prisoners is a denial of self, other selves and God.

Reflecting

ciple

on

the

tragic

case

of Bradford Brown,

an

African American accused

murder he did not commit, Carolyn McCrary underscored the prin of interdependence and the significance of the responsi ility of all persons

in 1975 of

for the

a

community. She said: T am only am I Bradford Brown,

am.' Not

of us, and

fied in

we are

ut I

we

am

are,

and since

we

are, therefore I

all of the incarcerated.

am

They

e sure, those of strong theistic faith ecause God is indeed, we are

And to

them.

proclaiming that I

ecause

are

are

all

usti

CONCLUSION

Ministry with prisoners

and those in

transposition

from

prison

cell to church


88

Burrow

needs to take on an entirely new look. This pew and service to God and world if we take seriously and apply the conditioning factors and ecome a reality may

really called for is a totally new order Jesus' proclamation that the Kingdom of God significant things, is at hand, not tomorrow or after a while, ut right now So there is really no time for us to trip over ourselves trying to form a committee or commission to consider the matter of what prison ministry would look like in a new order. The Kingdom of God is at hand, right now David Buttrick tells us that Jesus was much, much more than the therapeutic carer that so many have grown to love and worship. or, if that is all or even primarily what Jesus was is a out. His crucifi ion makes no sense. Writes the

norms

of

discussed in this article. What is than

not less

Buttrick:

Ultimately the fact of the cross udges all our preaching. If we declare Jesus a therapist for a hurt humanity, and a living revelation of God-love, how on earth can we account for the mounting hatred that hustled him off to Golgotha ' It

was

not

Jesus' peacekeeping, healing and caring that got

demise had

more

Calvary. ' According the people of his day new

Him crucified.

lesus'

the powers and principalities converging on to Buttrick, two words got Jesus into serious trou le with

to do with

preaching that the Kingdom is new order of things, right now Today had that Jesus not preached this message with a

and now.

when He

came

at hand:

A

We may surmise urgency His would have

een

a

different fate. Indeed, that

so

sense

of

many pastors,

popular today suggests that they skillfully avoid doing what lesus did. There is nothing urgent a out the gospel they preach nothing urgent a out the message of li eration for the imprisoned and what professed Christians and other elievers ought to e doing to effect that lay

denominations and

leaders

are so

li eration. This is the case, in part, ecause so many sell their souls to the powers that e, there y forfeiting their autonomy and freedom to preach thus saith the Lord. and

Too many pastors and laypersons work hard at gaining the of the mayor, the governor, corporate e ecutives and

approval

many want to cele rate and e recipient of honors and awards reason to cele rate and e decorated. The real

challenge

to those involved in

most of their efforts will

for

Bush's That ish the

we

a new

e futile if

order of

may not

now

things.

know the

they est

prison ministry

is to

means

of

achieving

so on.

Too

efore there is

recogni e

do not catch God's vision

significance

acceptance

not

that

George

this does not dimin

of the vision itself. In every generation persons have known how difficult it is to esta lish a new order. Indeed, even Niccolo Machiavelli

pointed

to this

difficulty in

the si teenth

century:


Reflections

on

Some

Theologico-Ethical Norms for Prison Ministry

89

e considered that there is nothing more difficult to carry out, nor dou tful of success, nor more dangerous to handle, than to initiate a new order of things. or the reformer has enemies in all those who profit the old order, and only lukewarm defenders in all those who would y

It must more

profit y

the

new

order, this lukewarmness arising partly from fear of their

adversaries, who have the laws in their favor and partly from the incredulity of mankind, who do not truly elieve in anything new until

they have had actual e perience of it. Thus it arises that on every opportu nity for attacking the reformer, his opponents do so with the eal of parti sans, the others only defend him half-heartedly, so that etween them he runs great danger. eliever

The

ent

on

taking seriously

popular difficulty of esta lishing e

to

new

and the

nor

to receive

an

the

order for the world that any desires order.

inspire new

we

God's vision for the world may not e pect outpouring of support and encouragement. The

new we

order

must

notwithstanding,

capture

it is God's vision of

a

and internali e. This should fuel

have to take concrete

steps toward the reali ation of

NOTES 1. Clarence Darrow, Address to the Prisoners in the Cook County lail, ed. Irving S. A rams, Crime and Criminals Chicago: Charles H. Kerr Pu lishing Company, 1975 1902 , p. 29. 2. Borden P. Bowne, The Principles of Ethics New York: Harper and Brothers, 1892 , p. 190. 3. I id., p. 193. Etienne Gilson made a similar criti ue of Plato and Aristotle. Neither Plato nor Aristotle, although they held all the necessary metaphysical principles in their hands, ever had a sufficiently high idea of the worth of the individual as such, to dream of any such ustification The Spirit of Medieval Philosophy New York: Scri ner's, 1940 , p. 190 . 4. Cain Hope elder, Toward a New Testament Hermeneutic for Justice, The Journal of Religious Thought, olume 45, Num er 1, Summer- all 1988 45:17. 5. I id., p. 18. . Charles Hartshorne, Reality As Social Process New York: Hafner Pu lishing Co., 1971 ,

p. 147 7

I id., pp. 151-152.

ut may not e limited to: atheistic, pantheistic, a solutistic, relativistic, teleological or ethical , realistic, panpsychistic, anthropormorphic, political, typical theis tic, and african american personalism. 9. or e ample, the British logician, I.M.E. McTaggart 18 -1925 was an atheistic personahst. See his ook. Some Dogmas of Religion London: Edward Arnold, 190 , chap. 4 and 5. 10. L. Harold DeWoh, Crime and Justice in America: A Parado of Conscience New York: Harper Row, 1975 , pp. 133-154. 8. These include,

11.

I id., pp. 154-15 .


90

Burrow

12. Bo vne, The

Principles of Ethics,

13. Gustavo Gutierre ,

pp. 190-191. Li eration and the Poor: The Pue la

Perm, Third World Li eration Theologies: A Reader 14. This

w as

Perspective,

ed. Deane

e v York: Or is, 198 , p. 25.

the Third General Conference of Latin American

15. Gutierre , Li eration and die Poor, p. 2 . 1 . Cited in Jon So rino, Arch ishop Romero: Memories and

Bishops.

Reflections

e v York: Or is,

1990 , pp. 15, 1 , 148, 197. 17. DeWolf, Crime and Justice in America, p. 155. 18. Nels erre, Return to Christianity New York: Harper Brothers, 1943 , p. 44. 19. erre, Christianity and Society Ne v York: Harper Brothers, 1950 , p. 118.

S. Brightman, An Introduction to Philosophy Ne v York: Holt Rinehart Winston, ed. , p. 314. 21. See Al ert C. Knudson, The Prophetic Movement in Israel e v York: The Methodist Book Concern, 1921 , p. 124. 22. See rancis J. McConnell, The Prophetic Ministry Ne-sv York: A ingdon Press, 1930 , pp. 2 9, 28 . 23. See Walter G. Muelder, Moral Law in Christian Social Ethics Richmond, irginia: John Kno Press, 19 , Chap. 2. The principles of communitv developed in this work and in L. Harold DeW'oLf, Responsi le reedom New York: Harper Row, 1975 were first suggest ed y one of DeWolf's graduate students. Glen Trim le See DeWolf, Ethical Implications for Criminal Justice, ed. Paul Deats, Jr. and Carol Ro , The Boston Personalist Tradition Macon, Georgia: Mercer Universitv Press, 198 , p. 223 . It is interest ing to note that as early as 1947 the British personaHst, Her ert H. armer, introduced the

20.

Edgar

19 3,

rev.

term persons in relationship, a term which had the same emphasis as Muelder's term, per sons-in-community See armer, God and Men Nashville: A ingdon-Cokes ury Press,

1947 , pp. 38, 55 . lohn S. Po ee, Toward an African Theology Nashville: A ingdon, 1979 , p. 49. 25. Ga riel M. Setiloane, African Theology: An Introduction dohannes urg: Skotaville Pu Ushers, 198 , p. 41. 24.

2 . I id.

27. Desmond Tutu,

Crying

in the Wilderness

Grand Rapids: Eerdmanns, 1982 , p. 99. helpfvd and insightful contri ution in this regard, claiming that God never enters into relationship wdth any individual person without simultaneous ly entering into relationship with other persons. armer contends that the est way to e press this principle is hy saying that when God created man He eo facto created an order or structure of persons in relationship with Himself and with one another. This is the ultimate secret of finite personal nature, of specifically human nature. Only as a man is part of, held in, that structure is he distinctively man.... To come into e istence as a man is to e incorporated in this world of the personal, to e in relation to persons the diN-ine person and human persons and e istence as a man is not possi le on anv other terms armer, ie Sercant of the Word New York: Scrin er's, 1942 , p. 38 . 28. Cited in Gerald Austin McHugh, Christian aith and Criminal Justice New York: Pauhst Her ert H.

armer makes

a

Press, 1978 , p. 194.

29. See her response to Henry C. Gregory, III, Incarceration and Reha ilitation: A Challenge to the Airican American Church and Academy, ed. Gayraud Wilmore, Black

Men in Prison: The

Response of the African

American Church Atianta: ITC Press, 1990 , p. 28.


Reflections

30. This

on

Some

Theologico-Ethical

Norms for Prison

Ministry

on the Black Church sponsored y Theological Center in Atlanta, Georgia, lune 3-5, 1992. Buttrick, Preaching Jesus Christ Philadelphia: ortress, 1988 , p. 29.

phrase

was

the theme of the Cor ference

91

the

Interdenominational 31. David

32. I id., p. 51. 33. I id., p. 41.

34. Niccolo Machiavelli, The

pp. 21-22.

Prince The Discourses New York: The Modern Li rary, 1950 ,



Methodist

Beginnings in Kentucky, 1783-1845 Kenneth Cain Kinghorn

Many

of the

early English

Colonists in North America

elieved that the

Pacific Ocean washed up against the western side of the Allegheny Mountains. The first ventures of e plorers over the mountains into

Kentucky In 1

were

finding a way to the Pacific Ocean. egan to e plore Kentucky, in search of a

often for the purpose of

9 Ro ert La SaUe and others

passage to the western waters. or the ne t half-century after La Salle's

e plorations along the Ohio only a few rare e peditions ventured into the area. But eventually other e plorers egan voyages down the Ohio River to peek into the Western territory. The author of an article in the Methodist Maga ine for 1820 River,

vol. 3 tells that

m

1754,

....One James M'Bride... .passing down the Ohio, with some others, in canoes, landed at the mouth of the Kentucky river, and marked the

initials of his

very recent

name

and date upon a tree, which yet, for aught I know,

date, and may

was

to

e

seen

until

a

e visi le.'

KENTUCKY SETTLEMENT BEGINS

Then, in 1750, e plorers

Cum erland

Gap,

a

egan pro ing

into

Kentucky through the egan lead-

natural land passage. In 17 9 Daniel Boone

Kenneth Cain Kinghorn is a Professor of Church History and the As ury Theological Seminary.

The As ury Theological Journal

ice

President-at-large at

ol. 47 No. 2

all 1992


Kinghorn

94

ing settlers into that territory, and he earned the reputation of eing Kentucky's pioneer settler, although he was not the first to come y land into Kentucky. Boone rought ack to the east tales of great hardwood forests, lue grass prairies, fertile meadows and vast herds of uffalo and deer.' Soon hunters were returning reports of the wonders of eautiful Kentuckie. The first permanent English set tlement was esta hshed in 1774 at Harrods urg y James Harrod. A year later, in 1775, Boones orough was founded on the Kentucky River not far from Le ington. The Earl of Dunmore, British governor of irginia, egan issuing Kentucky land grants to war veterans. At the same time, independent land speculators ac uired land from the Indians. In 1775, the Transylvania Company, under the direction of Richard Henderson of North Carolina, purchased a large amount of Kentucky territory from the Cherokee Indians. Those holding grants of crown land, independent pioneers, pelt hunters and private land speculators, conflict ed with each other and with Indians who had long occupied the territory. In the eighteenth century Kentucky was known as the dark and loody ground, in reference to the incessant wars etween the Iro uois and the Cherokees. And, as stated, in the early days of the territory, the conflicts etween the Indians and the white settlers was slow to cease. A. H. Redford reported in his The History of Methodism in Kentucky, The settlement of

Kentucky y the Anglo-American pioneer was no easy task. The fierce and merciless savage stu ornly disputed the right an to the soil. The to locate interesting word attempt upon these rich and fer tile lands was a proclamation of war.... On his captive the Indian inflicted the most relentless torture.

Methodist historian A le Stevens told of the death of

a

Methodist local

named Tucker in 1784: While

descending

the Ohio in

a

oat with

a

preacher

num er of his kindred, men,

women, and children, the oat was fired upon y Indians a attle the was ensued preacher mortally wounded uL falling upon his knees, and his prayed fought till, y self-possession and courage, the oat was res

cued. He then

immediately e pired, shouting the praise of the

In 1779 less than two hundred white

men

hved in

Kentucky,

Lord.

ut within

a

few

years thousands of new settlers arrived in the territory. And among these settlers were Methodist lay people. When Methodism came into Kentucky, almost no ca ins e isted in the vast untamed wilderness outside of walled

forts, called stations.

Typical parts of North America, Kentucky Methodism with who relocated and carried their rehgion with them. egan lay persons Two of the early Methodist settlers in Kentucky were John Durham and rancis of Methodism in other

Clark. Clark near

was a

Methodist local

PenyvHle, Kentucky,

in the

preacher, who moved from irginia to a spot early 1780s. The first Methodist society in Kentucky


Methodist

was

organi ed

in the home of

Beginnings

in

layman John

Kentucky,

95

1 783-1845

Diu-ham in 1783, with

rancis Clark

preacher and John Durham as class leader. Dr. Hemy Clay Morrison, founder As ury Theological Seminary, was a great, great grandson of John Durham.

as

of

LI E IN KENTUCKY

eighteenth century, the only roads in Kentucky were dirt trails. It was ship goods down the Ohio River to New Orleans than to take them across the mountains. The people made or grew almost everything they used. The spinning wheel, loom, knitting needle, co ler's ench, tannery, ca inet shop and lacksmith's shop were crucial to the times. Louisville and Cincinnati were, at the time, little more than villages. rancis Clark's preaching helped ring a out the conversion of Mrs. James Harrod, wife of the founder of Harrods urg. Other lay persons moved into Kentucky and opened their homes to Methodist preaching and class meetings. Methodist work prospered in the territory. Easterners claimed that life in the Kentucky wilderness was of a different character from that in the cities along the eastern seacoast. A well red South Carolinian, who completed a three-thousand-mile tour of the frontier, noted that in Kentucky even aristocrats had lost a portion of irginia caste and assumed something of Kentucky esteem, an a sence of reticence and a presence of presumptuousness. The Methodist preachers sought to communicate the in the language and after the manners of the peo to the frontier gospel Kentucky Matthew ple. Bishop Simpson 1811-1884 , himself orn on the frontier, later in favor of spoke Americani ing Methodism: In the

easier to

It is somewhat

singular

nearly all the trou les and secessions in trying to introduce English ideas and plans Church.... Every agitation has egun y e tolling British that

Methodism have arisen from into

our

American

usages and

depreciating American.'

Nowhere did American Methodism

speak to

the

people more

than in

Kentucky.

ASBURY ESTABLISHES THE KENTUCKY CIRCUIT In 178

rancis

Methodism held its conference in Baltimore. At this conference

As ury officially assigned

the church's first

missionaries

Bishop to the

Kentucky Circuit. These circuit riders were James Haw and Ben amin Ogden. Concerning James Haw, Methodist historian A el Stevens reports: were

the

the standard of the with

life work

sufferings

and

hardships

that he underwent in

planting region, surrounded savages, and traveling from fort to forL and every day e posing his ut notwithstanding every difficulty and em arrassment, the good

Numerous

progressed.

cross

in that wild and uncultivated


Kinghorn

9

Haw later wrote to

Kentucky territory to this

Bishop

country who

Haw wrote to

regarding the difficult and untamed assigned: No man must e appointed

Thomas Coke

to which he had

is afraid to die.

Bishop As ury:

een

Yet, Methodism grew. In another letter.

ion: the work of God is

going on rapidly in the new gained, and he is still going on glorious victory and heaven re oices daily over Hell trem les and to con uer.... con uering in Bour on held sinners that repent. At a uarterly meeting county, the Lord out his 19 and 20, 1788, Spirit in a wonderful poured Kentucky, luly manner, first on the Christians, and sanctified several of them powerfully and gloriously, and, as I charita ly hope, wholly.... As I went from that, through the circuiL to another uarterly meeting, the Lord converted two or three more. The Saturday and Sunday following, the Lord poured out his Spirit again.... Indeed, the wilderness and solitary places are glad, and the desert re oices and lossoms as the rose.... What shall I more say Time would fail to tell you all the Lord's doings among us. It is marvelous in our eyes.

Good

news

world

from

the Son of God has

a

Ben amin Ogden' s

life

typified

those of the

One historian wrote of him:

early

circuit riders in

Kentucky.

Ben amin Ogden was the synonym of courage and of suffering. preceded him in the West. He had alone traversed its wilds, had swum its rivers, and encountered difficulty and danger, and had met and con uered many a foe and then on the green-carpeted earth had laid him down to rest and sleep, with no covering save the deep lue sky. The

name

of

No cavalier had

By

the end of 178 , lames Haw and

Ben amin Ogden reported ninety mem ers growth of Methodism in Kentucky was great and rapid. In 1792, when Kentucky was admitted as a state, the conference had grown to twelve ordained preachers and 2,500 mem ers, e tending over nearly every area of the state. In a span of eighty years Methodism grew from a single society of only a few mem ers to a mem ership of almost fifty thousand, with more than five hundred ministers, churches or chapels in virtually every com munity, and schools scattered throughout the state.' In 1787 Bishop As ury divided the Kentucky Circuit everything west of the Alleghenies into two circuits Kentucky and Cum erland. The Cum erland Circuit included a portion of southern Kentucky and middle Tennessee. Additional missionaries were assigned to the Kentucky CircuiL which included all remaining known western territories. A Methodist society was organi ed in Le ington in 1789, as a part of the Le ington Circuit. This society ecame the of Methodist societies. The

first station church west of the

Alleghenies. Bishop As ury himself made his first visit to Kentucky, accompanied y Richard WhatcoaL Hope Hull and John Seawell. It is interesting to report that In 1790


Methodist

an

old

powder

horn with

that he carried

a

Kentucky,

As ury, May 1, 1790, was dis y a Kentucky physician. first trip into Kentucky, indicating

rancis

on

this

the

ourney. As ury's Journal reports that the travel into Kentucky Making his way toward Le ington, he recorded: a

on

97

1 783-1845

collection assem led

took it with him

firearm

in

large lettering,

covered at Medina, Ohio, in

Presuma ly, As ury

Beginnings

was

arduous and

tiring.

strangely outdone for want of sleep, having een greatly deprived of ourney through the wilderness which is like eing at sea, in some respects, and in others worse. Our way is over mountains, steep hills, deep rivers, and muddy creeks a thick growth of reeds for miles together and ut wild easts and savage men.... We ate no regular meal no inha itants I

was

it in my

read grew short, and I

our

I

saw

was

the graves of the slain no guard, and that

had set woman

much

spent.

twenty-four in one camp.' they were up late playing

they

I learn that

at cards. A poor

of the company had dreamed three times that the Indians had

sur

prised and killed them all she urged her hus and to entreat the people to set a guard, ut they only a used him, and cursed him for his pains. As the poor woman was relating her last dream the Indians came upon the camp she and her hus and sprung away, one east, the other west, and escaped. She afterwards

appeared

to

e

ack and witnessed the carnage. These poor sinners for destruction. I received an account of the death of

came

ripe

another wicked wretch who

was

vaunted, with horrid oaths, that some

of the

present eheld.

as

shot

no

through

the heart,

although

he had

Creek Indian could kill him. These

are

melancholy accidents to which the country is su ect for the to the land, it is the richest ody of fertile soil I have ever

As ury trekked on until he reach ayette County the Le ington area , and he lodged with Brother Richard Masterson, who had uilt the first Methodist Meeting House in Kentucky.' Until the construction of this chapel, known as Masterson's Station, Methodist meetings were held in homes was located a out five miles northwest of

Masterson' s Station site

now

occupied y

a

federal women's

prison. As ury's

visit

or

out-of-doors.

Le ington, on a to Kentucky was

the first visit of the leader of any denomination to this western wilderness. On May 14, 1790, at Masterson's Station, As ury egan the first Methodist conference in Kentucky territory. At the time, Methodist mem ership in

Kentucky stood at 1,2 5 whites and 107 lacks. At this conference. Bishop As ury ordained three elders and increased the circuits in Kentucky from two to four.' rancis Poythress,' whom As ury appointed as presiding elder a year

earlier,

was

left in

charge

Western Methodism, James

of the

inley,

growing

a

work in

contemporary,

Kentucky.

In his Sketches

wrote a out the

early

of

work of


Kinghorn

98

James Haw, Ben amin Ogden and

rancis

Poythress:

ground, and, with the assistance of the few local efore them, they carried the war into the camp of the enemy, and in a short time a powerful and e tensive revival took place. Hundreds were added to the Church and considering the situation of the country, surrounded y a wilderness, and the Indians continually making depredations on the frontiers, and the people constantly harassed and penned up in forts and stations, it may e considered among the greatest revivals that was ever known. In this revival a num er of wealthy and respecta le citi ens were added to the Church....' the whole

They occupied men

een there

who had

Methodism

came

to Louisville in

organi ed

180 , and the first permanent Methodist society

there in 1817, with Henry Bascom as its first pastor.' Methodism's uarterly meetings and annual conferences were

was

important preachers met. It was reported that the circuit riders never met without em racing each other and never parted without weeping. Peter Cartwright 1785-1872 recorded in his Auto iography: times when the

People would walk three or four miles to class-meetings, and home again, Sundays they would go thirty or forty miles to their uarterly meetings, and think it a glorious privilege to meet their presiding elder, and the rest of the preachers.' on

BETHEL ACADEMY

One of the

su ects of discussion at the 1790 conference was the matter of pro viding education for the inha itants of the Western wilderness. The conference adopted plans to construct Bethel Academy. Due to the offer of one hundred acres of land, the site for Bethel Academy was fi ed in Jessamine County at a end in the Kentucky River, a out three miles from the present Wilmore. As ury recorded in his Journal that the site was a good spot for uilding materi als.' Readily availa le were trees for lum er, limestone for a foundation and clay for rick.' Bethel Academy opened in 1794, two years efore Kentucky achieved statehood. This

was

Methodism's second school and its first school

west of the

Alleghenies. Bethel Academy's first principal was John Metcalf, a Methodist preacher, who served until 1803. In 1799, the Rev. alentine Cook took charge of the seminary studies at Bethel Cook was the most Academy. eminent graduate of Cokes ury College in Maryland. His teaching skills and his enthusiasm attracted students, and the school reached its peak enrollment under his leadership. We read thaL alentine Cook

ing the

rock

on

ground

the

eat

a

path

luff of the

where he

from his home at Bethel

Kentucky river,

daily wrestled

Academy

and left the

with the Lord.

print

to the shelv

of his knees in


Methodist

Beginnings

in

Kentucky,

1 783-1845

99

Cook left after

only two years, owing, principally, to a feeling of opposition that een very improperly awakened in the Church against the institution, and which he found it impossi le to overcome. '

had

or

in

short time Bethel

a

Kentucky,

Academy

and indeed

functioned

the West.

as a

center of Methodist

activity meeting of the Western Academy Octo er , 1800 ,

The first

Conference in the nineteenth century met at Bethel with rancis As ury presiding. ' Kentucky Conference historian, J. L. Clark, con tended, With Bethel early Methodism succeeded in Kentucky without it

might

Methodism ences

and it

Kentucky.

was

But Bethel

proved

have failed.

The school hosted at least si

the

of instruction and church administration in

early

Academy

hu

did not last.

Its lack of funds and its remote

e insurmounta le o stacles. The

to

to Bethel.

came

Bishop

geography

entry for As ury's Journal for May 4,

1800, shows that he elieved that Bethel Academy could I

annual confer

not

e sustained.

Whatcoat and William M'Kendree

preached:

I

was

ut weep. ...Here is Bethel Cokes ury in little de ected three miniature, eighty y thirty feet, stories, with a high roof, and finished elow. Now we want a fund and an income of three hundred per year to I could say

so

carry it on without which it will e useless. But it is too distant from pu lic places its eing surrounded y the river Kentucky in part, we now find to e

enefit: thus all

no

rother Coke

was

After this

Journal

Poythress

with the

entry,

our

e cellencies

myself were as seat of Cokes ury.

and

find

we

no more

are

much

turned into defects.

overseen

with this

references to Bethel

Academy

two

more

uilding

seems

to have

years as materials

a

given

neigh orhood

were

a

As ury's

near y Nicholasville, for denominational institution.

use

THE GENERAL CON ERENCE DI IDES METHODISM Until 179 there was only one conference in Methodism

some

England

Baltimore

South Carolina

a

for

of the

in the

con

the General

Conference. That year the General Conference divided Methodism into si al conferences: New

e

facility operated

school. Between 1805 and 1810

removed to

struction of another school, not

in

for the school. Bethel ceased to

up hope Methodist institution in 1803 when the principal left. The he

Perhaps place as Dr.

annu

Philadelphia irginia Western

The Western Conference covered a vast region, now consisting geographically In 179 the Western Conference was com twenty annual conferences. The Kentucky District was geoand Holston districts two of Kentucky. posed of

some


Kinghorn

100

it included the Natche Circuit, in Mississippi the Scioto and Circuits, in the Northwestern Territory the Cum erland Circuit, in Middle Tennessee and the entire state of Kentucky. William McKendree was

graphically large: Miami

appointed presiding elder of the Kentucky District

of the Western Conference. ''

In 1812 the General Conference divided the Western Conference into two

the Ohio and the Tennessee. Even

annual conferences

though Kentucky

early een the center of Methodism in the West, the state was divided the Ohio and Tennessee Conferences. One historian remarks:

had

etween

eight years, during the crucial, formative period in her history, Kentucky was divided etween two Conferences, earing the names of ad oining States. This division of territory was a death- low to any commu nity of interest or effort, and no wonder Kentucky Methodism lost its lead ership in the West. or

Not until 1820 did the General Conference recreate the

Conference.

A. H.

Redford,

in his

History of Methodism

in

Kentucky Kentucky, notes.

rom 1812 to 1820, the Ohio and Tennessee conferences had each em raced

Kentucky, so that no community of interest was likely to enterprise of this kind. The formation of the Kentucky confer ence placed the Church in a position to look after their resources, and to come up to the measure of their duty.

a out one-half of e felt in

an

By this time Kentucky Methodism had grown to si teen thousand, and church mem ership in Methodism in those days was far less than the actual num er who attended the Methodist meetings. The first session of the new Kentucky Annual Conference met in Le ington in 1821. At this session. Bishops Ro ert R. Ro erts elected, 181 and Enoch alternated as of four The consisted conference 181 elected, George presiders. large districts with more than thirty circuits. The geography of these districts was determined largely y rivers. As in other conferences, the Kentucky Conference included a num er of local preachers who helped care for the soci eties during the a sence of the ordained circuit riders. THE CIRCUIT RIDERS In the 1820s there

were

great stretches of un roken forests in Kentucky. The trails, often unsure of their way. The ridle

circuit riders traveled indistinct

paths fre uently forked, and a new preacher seldom knew which road to take. Customarily, the preachers carried a hatchet, called a marking iron, which they used to la e the trail for those to follow. During the first years of his itin erancy in Kentucky, Bishop H. H. Kavanaugh more than one time got lost on the trail traveling the Little Sandy circuit in the eastern part of the state. Preachers sometimes had to sleep in the woods. One minister reported waking to find his


Methodist

Beginnings

in

Kentucky,

101

1 783-1845

eard covered with ice from the fro en rain that fell during the night. Moses M. a friend of Henry Bascom later a ishop recorded numerous stories of

Henkle,

Bascom's adventures

IBascom

as a

travelling preacher.

or

e ample:

preaching in a ca in, which was at once church and people were listening with seriousness and deep attention to the truths of the gospel, when, in the very midst of his sermon, his host, who sat near the door, suddenly rose from his seat, snatched the gun from two wooden rackets upon which it lay against the oist, went hastily out, fired it off, and returning, put the gun ack in its place, and uietly seated himself to hear the remainder of the sermon. The whole affair had hardly consumed as much time as it re uires to read this account of it, and in a very few moments all was going on as smoothly as if no interruption had occurred. After service was ended, Bascom in uired of the man the mean ing of his strange conduct. Sir, said he, we were entirely out of meat, and I was perple ed to know what we should give you for dinner, and it was preventing me from en oying the sermon, when the Good One sent a flock of wild turkeys this way I happened to see them, took my gun and killed two at a shot my mind felt easy, and I en oyed the remainder of the sermon with perfect satisfaction. ' He

dwelling.

Salaries

made

was

The

were

goods.

small, and fre uently the preachers

The circuit riders seldom lasted

were

more

paid

than

a

in

few

produce or hand years. Many died

young. ORGANI ATION AND PRACTICES O The local Methodist societies

were

KENTUCKY METHODISTS

divided into classes. Each class

was

under

meetings provided onding, nurture and accounta ility close fellowship developed etween the mem ers of the classes. W. E. Arnold writes in his History of Methodism in Kentucky, the

care

The

of

a

class leader. The class

origination

of the

mem ership

into classes and the

distinctive features of Methodism when the

Kentucky

class-meeting Conference

were

egan.

Attendance upon the class-meetings was o ligatory. William Burke had over one hundred names stricken from the roles of the Danville Kentucky

circuit for non-attendance upon the class-meetings. The coming together of small groups for the purpose of talking over their religious e periences, of

another, and of receiving instruction in the way of godliness from their more e perienced leaders, was indeed a school

praying

of

for and

e horting

religious education

one

that has

never

een

surpassed

among any

people. '

ournals, diaries and accounts of the day reveal that prayer was a very significant part of the life of the Methodists, in Kentucky and throughout the entire Methodist connection. Nearly every Methodist home had family prayers. The


Kinghorn

102

morning and evening. Customarily, preachers knelt when they entered the pulpit, and mem ers of the congregation usually owed for a silent prayer efore taking their seats in the pews. Methodist singing was noteworthy. Hymnals, at first, were scarce, and the preacher lined out the words to the hymns. There were no pews in churches, oth

no

choirs,

no

organs

or

other instruments of music.

philosophically opposed two reasons: they could not

The Methodists

were

not

them for instruments, they afford them, and they regarded the words as more ut

to musical

did not

use

important than the instrumental accompaniment. The early Methodists in the Kentucky area lived and dressed simply, if not austerely. The following passage appears in Peter Cartwright's Auto iography:

early day dressed plain attended their meetings faithfully, especially preaching, prayer and class meetings they wore no ewelry, no ruffles.... They religiously kept the Sa ath day many of them a stained from dram-drinking, not ecause the temperance reformation was ever heard of in that day, ut ecause it was interdicted in the General Rules of our Discipline. The Methodists of that day stood up and faced their preacher when they sung they kneeled down in the pu lic congregation as well as elsewhere, when the preacher said, Let us pray. There was no standing among the mem ers in time of prayer, especially the a omina le practice of sitting down during that e ercise was unknown among early Methodists. Parents did not allow their children to go to alls or plays they did not send them to dancing-schools they generally fasted once a week, and almost universally on the riday efore each uarterly meeting. The Methodists in that

Laughter in church services deep life of the Spirit.

was

ta oo,

as

it

was

felt to

e

un ecoming

to the

METHODIST HIGHER EDUCATION It is well known that the 1820 General Conference of the Methodist

Church ordered the esta lishment of tution of schools

or

seminaries of

a

committee to outline

learning,

direction of several annual conferences.

within the

a

plan

Episcopal

for the insti

ounds, and under the

report to the confer safeguard Methodist control and to guarantee that instruction would always e in keeping with Methodist piety and doctrine. In an attempt to ence

The committee

wished to

this aim, the committee recommended that said trustees, principals, and the teachers under them, shall always e mem ers of the Methodist Episcopal Church. ' The recommendation of the committee lost, and along with it the church was later to lose control of many of the schools it had founded. In his assure

History of American Methodism, William R. Cannon remarks, One help wondering what might have een the church's education history the amendment prevailed. Methodism, in its concern to e roadminded

article in The cannot

had


Methodist

Beginnings

in

Kentucky,

103

1 783-1845

and inclusive, has had a genius for esta lishing institutions which others have later come to control. The report which was adopted recommended that the

annual conferences esta lish, as soon as practica le, literary institutions under their own control, in such way and manner as they may think proper. The conference instructed the

mending

the

su ect to

ishops to carry the resolution into effect each annual conference.

The first annual conferences to

Conference

Kentucky

respond

y

recom

to this directive from General

Kentucky Annual Conference in founding a college at Augusta, in northern Kentucky. This was the first Methodist institution of higher education a ove the level of an academy founded west of the Appalachian Mountains. In Decem er 1822, the state of Kentucky chartered Augusta College, authori ing it to grant degrees. The college was located on si thousand acres on the Ohio River, the site of Bracken Academy, previously founded in 1798. In were

and Ohio. In 1821 the

and the Ohio Annual Conference

1827 Martin Ruter,

ook

oined

resources

agent of the Cincinnati

ranch of the Methodist Book

president. Kentucky's Transylvania University had con degree on Ruter, making him the first Methodist Episcopal min ister to receive this honorary degree. At the time, Augusta College was the only Methodist college in e istence, and it attracted students from all areas of the country. The college graduated its first class with a B.A. degree in 1829. Num ered among its alumni were Bishop Randolph S. oster and John Miley, a cele rated theologian who ecame America's e uivalent to England's Richard Watson. Writing in 1870, A. H. Concern,

was

elected

ferred the D.D.

Redford stated.

The vast amount of

Augusta College

good

no lest intellects have

piety,

of

genius,

that resulted to the Church and the country from e estimated. Over its fortunes some of the

can never

presided its faculty was always composed of men of learning and in all the learned professions, in

and of

almost every Western and Southern State, its Alumni may yet e found. It gave to the medical profession, to the ar, and to the pulpit, many of their

rightest lights. '

But the al

college, although poised

prominence,

for eventual

did not last. Due to the

greatness and significant nation

growing

tensions

over

slavery,

the 1844

General Conference voted to separate into two denominations. The division of Methodism into the Methodist Episcopal Church and the Methodist Episcopal

Church, South positioned Kentucky and Ohio

in two

separate denominations

college. Ohio remained in the Methodist Episcopal spelled Church and Kentucky oined the new Methodist Episcopal Church, South. In doing so the Kentucky Conference withdrew its support for Augusta College, The Ohio Conference trans and the Kentucky legislature repealed its charter. ferred its patronage to the Ohio University at Delaware, Ohio. Thus, in 1844 and

the death of the


104

Kinghorn

sponsorship

y

oth conferences ceased.

When the Methodist

Episcopal

Church, South was organi ed in Louisville, Kentucky, in 1845, Kentucky Methodism took new directions, and at this point we may conveniently mark the end of the eginnings of Methodism in Kentucky.

Notes

Theophilus Armenius, A Descriptive Maga ine New-York: J. Soule and T. Mason, 1.

iew of the Western

for the Methodist

United States, vol. 3, 1820 , p. 38 . 2. Samuel Eliot Morison, The O ford

Country, Methodist Episcopal Church in the

History of the American People New York: O ford 210-211. Press , 19 5, University pp. 3. William Warren Sweet, Circuit-Rider Days Along the Ohio New York Cincinnati: The Methodist Book Concern , 1923, p. 1 . 4. Page Smith, A New Age Begins, A People's History of the American Nation New York: McGraw-Hill, 197 , 2:1213. 5. Harry J. Carman, Harold C. Syrett and Bernard W. Wishy, A History of the American People, 3d ed. New York: Alfred A. Knopf, 19 7 , 1:23 . . A. H. Redford, The History of Methodism in Kentucky Nashville: Southern Methodist Pu lishing House , 1870, 1:19. 7. A el Stevens, A Compendious History of American Methodism New York: Eaton Mains Cincinnati: Jennings Pye, n.d. , pp. 227-228. 8. Roy Hunter Short, Methodism in Kentucky pu lished y the Commissions on Archives and History of the Kentucky and Louisville Conferences, The United Methodist Church, Rutland, T: Academy Books , 1979, p. 1. 9. uoted in Page Smith, The Shaping of America, A People's History of the American Nation New York: McGraw-Hill, 1980 , p. 172. 10. Matthew Simpson, A Hundred Years of Methodism New York: Nelson Phillips Cincinnati: Hitchcock Walden, 187 , p. 8. 11. rancis As ury, The Journal and Letters of rancis As ury, ed Elmer T. Clark, J. Manning Potts and Jaco S. Payton London: Epworth Press Nashville: A ingdon Press, 1958 , 1:511. As ury's Journal for Sunday, April 30, reads: I preached three times, and made a collection to defray the e penses of sending missionaries to the western settlements 1 spoke

twice

on

the

same

su ect through

the

course

of the week.

These missionaries

James Haw and Ben amin Ogden, appointed to Kentucky, and Thomas Humphreys and John Ma ors, volunteers for Georgia. 12. A el Stevens, History of the Methodist Episcopal Church in the United States of America, New York: Carlton Porter, 18 7 , 2:3 1-3 2. 13. uoted in A. H. Redford, The History of Methodism in Kentucky, 1:4 -48. 14. A. H. Redford, Western Cavaliers: Em racing the History of the Methodist Episcopal Church in Kentucky from 1832 to 1844 Nashville: Southern Methodist Pu Ushing House, 187 , p. 24. 15. M. L. Scudder, American Methodism Hartford, CT: S. S. Scranton Co., 18 7 , p. 239. 1 . A. H. Redford, The History of Methodism in Kentucky 1:11. 17. Roy Hunter Short, Methodism in Kentucky, p. 3. were


Methodist

18. This

five

massacre

is called

Beginnings

McNitt's Defeat.

in

Kentucky,

Twenty-four

105

1 783-1845

were

killed and

scalped,

and

carried away, apparently y the Chickamaugas, who rampaged from 1785 to 1794. The campsite and the graves are preserved in the Levi Jackson State Park, near women

London, Kentucky.

As ury's Journal, 1: 3 - 38. Encyclopedia of World Methodism, 2 vols., ed. Nolan B. Harmon Nashville: United Methodist Pu lishing House, 1974 , 2:1533-1534. 21. Harry R. Short, Masterson's Station, Encyclopedia of World Methodism, 2:1533-1534. 22. Wilson Lee, Thomas Wilkerson and Barna as McHenry. 23. John letcher Hurst, The History of Methodism, 7 vols., New York: Eaton Mains, 19.

20.

1903 , 4:474.

Poythress 1732-1810 was one of Anglican Deverau Jarratt's converts in as the first irginia. presiding elder in Kentucky and was one of the founders of Bethel Academy, supervising its construction. 25. James B. inley, Sketches of Western Methodism: Biographical, Historical, and Miscellaneous, Illustrative of Pioneer Life, ed. W. P. Strickland Cincinnati: Printed at the 24.

rancis

He served

Methodist Book Concern, 2 .

Everts, 1883 c. 187 27.

Author, 185 , p.

ed. Matthew

, p. 548.

Auto iography of Peter Cartwright,

York: Carlton 28.

or the

Encyclopedia of Methodism,

.

Simpson,

5th

rev.

the Backwoods Preacher,

ed.

Philadelphia:

Louis H.

ed. W. P. Strickland

New-

Porter, 1857 , pp. 74-75.

As ury's Journal,

1: 39.

29. Al ea God old, Bethel Academy, Encyclopedia of World Methodism, I .258. 30. W. E. Arnold, A History of Methodism in Kentucky, 2 vols. Louisville: Herald Press, 193 , 2:5. 31. Edward Stevenson, Biographical Sketch of the Rev. alentine Cook, A. M., with An Appendi Containing His Discourse on Baptism Nashville: pu lished for the author, 1858 , pp. 22-23. 32. William Warren

,

Sweet, Methodism in American History New York: The Methodist

Book Concern, 1933 , p. 1 1. 33. J. L. Clark, Kentucky Conference's Contri ution to Methodism

Louisville: Press of the

Central Methodist, n.d. , p. 3. 34. Certain artifacts collected from

an e cavation at the original Bethel Academy y G. Her ert Livingston, are deposited at As ury Theological Seminary. 35. As ury's Journal, 2:253. 3 . Encyclopedia of World Methodism, 2:2541..

conduct

ed

37. The Holston District em raced the Green Circuit, in Tennessee, and the Russell and New River Circuits in irginia.

Holston,

38. Clark, Kentucky Conference's Contri ution to Methodism, p. 2. 39. In 1820, the Kentucky Conference was composed of the following districts: Kentucky, Salt River, Green River and Cum erland. A strip of irginia and a small portion of Tennessee were also included in the Kentucky Conference. 40. Redford, The

History of Methodism in Kentucky, 3:97-98. Life of Henry Bidleman Bascom, D.D., LL.D.,

41. M. M. Henkle, The

Methodist 42.

Episcopal

Church, South Louisville: Morton

Arnold, A History of Methodism in Kentucky,

43. In addition to

hymnals,

there

were

2:7.

songsters

Late

Bishop of

the

Griswold, 1854 , p. 128.

small

word-only

ooklets which

con-


Kinghorn

10

tained camp meeting songs that were not included in Methodism's hymnals. The songs in these Uttle pu lications lacked polish, and they often contained thin theology and incor rect grammar. Peter Cartwright recorded that in his 53 years of itinerant ministry he sold 10,000 worth of ooks, and many of his sales were songsters and hymnals. The most were Stith Mead's Hymns and Spiritual Songs, Thomas of the

early songsters Pilgrim Songster, and Orange Scott's Camp-Meeting Hymn Books. Auto iography of Peter Cartwright, p. 74. Edward S. Ninde, The Story of the American Hymn Cincinnati: A ingdon Press, 1921 ,

popular

Hinde's The

44.

45.

p. 103. 4 .

James

I.

Warren, Jr., O

or

a

47.

Tongues: The History, Nature, Rapids: ondervan, 1988 , p. 73.

Thousand

Music in the Methodist Tradition Grand

Auto iography of Peter Cartwright,

and

Influence of

the Backwoods Preacher, pp. 74-75.

Journals of the General Conference, 179 -183 New York: Carlton and Phillips, 1855 , p. 183. 49. Journals of the General Conference, 179 -183 , p. 207. 50. The History of American Methodism, 3 vols., ed. Emory Stevens Bucke New York Nashville: A ingdon Press, 19 4 , 1:552-553. 51. Journals of the General Conference, 179 -183 , p. 208. 52. Redford, The History of Methodism in Kentucky, 3:100-101. 53. Encyclopedia of Methodism, p. 8 4.

48.

54. I id., p. 70. 55. Roy Hunter Short, Methodism in

Kentucky, p. 82. Kentucky Methodism. By 1845 Methodist mem er ship in Kentucky had reached 52,0 4, the fruit of pioneer Methodism in the state. The 184 General Conference of the Methodist Episcopal Church, South created the Louisville Conference. Thus, in 184 the Kentucky Annual Conference was divided into two annual conferences the Kentucky Conference and the Louisville Conference. In 1848 the towns of Le ington and Winchester received northern pastors. In 1852, the northern ranch of Episcopal Methodism formed a Kentucky Conference of the Methodist Episcopal Church. The organi ing Kentucky Conference of the Methodist Episcopal Church was held at Covington, Kentucky, in Octo er, 1853, with Bishop Edmund S. lanes presiding. The conference was organi ed ecause there were Kentucky clergy persons and congregations that wished to e affiliated with the northern ranch of the church. By 1849, the Kentucky Conference of the Methodist Episcopal Church had a out two thousand mem ers. During the Civil War many of the clergy of the Methodist Episcopal Church, South favored the Union, although they remained mem ers of the Kentucky Conference of the Methodist Episcopal Church, South. In 18 5, eighteen minis ters of the Methodist Episcopal Church, South withdrew and oined the Methodist Episcopal Church, most as local preachers. At the meeting of the Kentucky Conference of the Methodist Episcopal Church in 18 , some twenty si preachers from the southern church were admitted into the Methodist Episcopal Church. The two ranches of Methodism, of course, merged in 1939. 5 . But it

was

the start of

a new era

for


Book Reviews Sasson, Jack M. Jonah: A New Translation with Introduction, Commentary, and

Interpretation. David Noel

ol. 24B of The Anchor Bi le. Eds. William

reedman. New York:

Dou leday,

ISBN 0-385-23525-9.

Engaging

descri es

Jack Sasson' s

Al right

and

Hard ack,

Jonah. This mon longest, longest commentary on Jonah in is and will actually interesting, print prove so, I think, to readers of divergent of Jonah. Sasson, chair of the department of religious studies at understandings of North Carolina Chapel Hill , has produced a work particularly the University umental work

one

of the

treatment of the

o well

vi, 3 8 pp.

1990.

ook of

if not the

points: it's penetrating te tual notes and its appreciation for the powerful literary work. Sasson' s te tual notes scrutini e every sylla le of the Massoretic te t and do so in sophisticated conversation with all significant versions and te tual witness es, ancient and modern. But he is not stuck on sylla les. He proves a master of differentiating words and e pressions and discerning their possi le meanings. The grammatical, syntactical, le ical and philological studies which occupy the ulk of the work rarely disappoint. In spite of Mr. Sasson's hopes to the contrary p. i , I fear these e cellent notes will e of limited value to persons without facility in the i lical languages. ortunately, their results are translated into reada le prose in the much more a reviated comments on each passage. Sasson's carefully crafted, lively translation of the ook distills this literary finesse. Printed as a whole at the opening of the work, it is repeated, unit y unit, as the commentary unfolds following here, as at almost all other points, strong

at two

ook of Jonah

as a

the standard format of The Anchor Bi le series . In the Comments, Sasson engages the narrator

on

how characters

are

made

plotted p. ii , indicating the literary narrativecritical vantage point from which this commentator approaches the story of Jonah. His careful work along these lines, including attention to the micro- and to

ehave and how events

macro-rhetorical and

are

narratological

features of the te t treated in the te tual

notes, is the second ma or strength of this study. This focus allows the inter preter to pursue whatever historical ackground he deems necessary for under

standing the narrative world of the ook specific historical reconstruction

in any

Sasson clears the way for concentration

Jonah while avoiding entanglement critical to his interpretation. Thus, what Jonah might really e a out.

of

as

on

point that the commentary's chief flaws the ook of Jonah is really a out think anyway And emerge. What does Sasson this In reader's make what difference would it udgment, Sasson seems

Unfortunately,

it is

precisely

at this

overly

The As ury Theological Journal

ol. 47 No. 2

all 1992


Book Reviews

108

eager to avoid the conclusion that Jonah may indeed e a narrow little man. Concern a out a uses of such a conclusion to censure Judaism and Jewish attri utes seem to keep Sasson from tracking the narrator's own focus. The

writer, unflattering with God

precisely

it may e, seems indeed to have pitched Jonah's argument at the point of the Lord's compassion toward Nineveh p. 274 as

and note 7, among several similar references . The link of 4:1-2 with 3:5-10 and the return to this very uestion in 4:10-11 are ill e plained on other grounds.

prophetic identity, individual human dignity and the like could ust as readily have een clearly flagged y the narrator, ut they were not. E clusion of this interpretive option early on entails other unfortunate results. In this student's udgment, Sasson overestimates the depth of Jonah's spiritual reversal on oard ship and in the elly of the ig fish, neglects the nonpenitential literary form of the 2:2-9 psalm, fails to pursue clues to the nature of Jonah's activity in Nineveh deftly identified on pp. 23 -237, triviali es God's uestions to lonah in 4:4 and 9 to ueries a out the intensity of Jonah's emotional response, and inade uately e plains God's redirection of Jonah's frustration and the point of God's final uestions. inally, in the concluding review of various interpretive approaches to the Jonah narrative pp. 321-351 , as in the a reviat ed Introduction pp. 7-29 , Sasson treats positions, some of which one would think to e mutually e clusive, so evenhandedly that this reader at least wished

Crises of

for

a

clearer summary of Sasson's

own

views.

Even so, readers of Sasson's

Jonah will find a wealth of information with interpretation of the ook. Weakness at several strate

which to pursue their own gic points prevents the work from the work DA

as a

whole

as

eing

as

useful

as a

guide

to

understanding

it is for the e amination of the details of most of its

parts.

ID L. THOMPSON

Thompson Professor As ury Theological Seminary . M. and Ada

Craddock,

red B. Luke.

Preaching.

Louisville:

0-8042-3123-0.

of Bi lical Studies

Interpretation:

John

Kno

As Bandy Professor of Preaching and Theology, and as a preacher of remarka

the ideal contri utor to

A Bi le

Commentary

Press, 1990. 298pp.

Teaching and

New Testament at the Candler School of

le skill and

reputation,

series which intends to

commentary teach, preach, and study the Bi le in the community of faith a

for

21.95 hardcover. ISBN

Craddock

serve

seems

those who

p. v . Throughout


The

Ashury Theological Journal

109

the entire volume the reader feels the guiding touch oth of a teacher wellversed in the issues of i hcal criticism, and of a preacher well at home in the pulpit. The preacher in Craddock appears early, as he reflects on Simeon's warning to

Mary that the

fact is

which

sword would

pierce her soul, 2:25 : As much as we may wish to oin only positive, satisfying, and lessed in hfe, the inescapa le that anyone who turns on the light creates shadows... and it is this reality causes many to take up the task of preaching with great hesitation... p. 39 .

name

a

of Jesus

to the

healing of the Geresene Demoniac, Craddock notes how young ministers to discover that the reign of God has its ene mies.. ..Being asked to leave y those you seek to help is a pain unlike any other pp. 117-118 . But, as if turning to counsel ministers flushed v dth success, Craddock notes from Jesus' warning to the Pharisees 11:37-12:1 how the increasing crowds one of can turn the head and ro powers of discernment p. 159 . Useful tips on the craft of preaching are scattered throughout, with special care and pointed warnings reserved for the tricky task of preaching the para les. In a page-long e cursus on the story of the Good Samaritan, one can imagine Craddock on his hands and knees pleading his case: irst, painting unnecessari ly unattractive portraits of the priest and the Levite weakens the story.... Second, great care should e given to the search in our culture for analogies to the Samaritan. Often poor analogies triviali e a te t p. 151 . More sound advice is offered with his treatment of the para les of lostness in Luke 15: The teacher and the preacher would do well not to try to e plain para lesl....Like an e plained oke, an e plained para le violates the listener p. 187 . But the value of Craddock' s e plicit preaching, counsel and general insight on the i lical te t is matched y the value of his writing as a model for preachers. In comments

painful

on

the

it is for

Such is the

care

taken in his choice of words and their cadence that the

commen

egs, ing depends not on cheap tricks or guage at the point of genuine theological reflection and personal insight. Craddock's musings a out the nature of Satan's temptation of Jesus illustrate: There is nothing here of de auchery no self-respecting devil would approach a person with offers of personal, domestic, or social ruin. That is in the small print at the ottom of the temptation p. 5 . Likewise, his comments a out salt in tary

te t

at

times,

to

e read aloud

preached. The power of his writ cute sayings, ut on the freshcrafting of lan or even

Under pressures oth open and su tle, pressures all of us know, salt does not decide to ecome pepper it ust gradually loses its savor. The process can e so gradual, in facL that no one really notices. Well, almost no one p. 183 .

14:34-35:

light most vividly in his fre uent Gospel genre. He never tires of admon coaching on a harmonistic from reading of the Gospels and to hear ishing the reader to refrain whole a each Gospel in its own right as literary composition. Craddock follows his own advice, drawing the reader to notice and reflect upon the placement of a perithe themes in which it participates, the mterplay of charcope within the Gospel, Craddock's

scholarly perspective

comes

the nature of narrative and of

to


Book Reviews

110

acters, and similar matters often housed under the ru ric of literary criticism. Most of our disappointments with this volume can e traced to the friction etween common e pectations of what a commentary should provide and the

particular thrust

ancient, e tra- i hcal what

wants is

one

an

Craddock is hard to

JOSEPH

y this commentary series. Readers wiU find introducto uestions and synoptic pro lems only hghtly rushed. No arest of i liographies is made availa le. Reference to literature or to particular i hcal scholars is rare. But if intelligent and reflective companion while reading Luke,

chosen

ry matters, historical inde , and only the

eat.

R. DONGELL

Assistant Professor of Bi lical Studies

As ury Theological Seminary

olf, Judith M. Gundry, Paul Louisville: Westminister 1990. 325 pp. ISBN 0-

John

Perseverance, Staying In and alling Away. Press, Reprint of Tu ingen: J. C. B. Mohr,

Kno

4-25175-7.

slightly revised version of a doctoral dissertation accepted y the evangelical-theological faculty of the University of Tu ingen in 1988. Citations of sources are in the original Greek, He rew, German and Erench languages. E tensive footnotes, i liography, and inde of scriptural reference are provided. olf, assistant professor of New Testament at uller Theological Seminary, presents an e egetical study of relevant Pauline passages to support her thesis. Although the situations which threaten Christians' faith lead Paul to face them with the real possi ility of alienation from salvation, he elieves that they will attain the final salvation, ecause they are elected y God. God will ring this a out y overcoming the o stacles to their salvation posed y outward threats This is

or

their

a

own

ethical failure

or even

temporary alienation from

the

gospel

wrong p. 28 -7 . In part one, olf studies Pauline passages which affirm the final salvation of the Christian. Part two e amines the passages dealing with udgment and punish

through ment of

poral

un elief

or

insiders.

elief

According

to

olf,

some

of these

udgments udged

and do not affect the final salvation. Some of those

merely

are

are mere

tem

insid

of the Christian group ut not Christians at all. Part three deals with pas sages which indicate that some of God's elect, including Israelites, are alienated

ers

from salvation.

mately.

olf considers this

as

only temporary. They

Part four treats the passages which e press Paul's

will

e saved ulti

concern

for the ulti-


The

Ashury Theological Journal

111

mate effect of his mission and Christians'

receiving the grace or eheving in vain. These passages are not related to the final salvation of Christians, olf claims. In studying these passages, olf traces the development of Paul's argument, and takes the conte tual and philological data into account. She interacts e ten

sively

with

e egetical literature. She has many valua le e for her thesis, however, is weak. support In the passages studied in part one, Paul emphasi

egetical insights. es

the

The

certainty

of

Christians' final salvation. Paul, however, speaks a out the Christians collective ly, not every Christian individually. The final salvation of Christians collectively is certain. But this is not

necessarily true for every Christian. The parallel pas 5:25-27 and Col. 1:22-23 illustrate this. The former deals with the

sages of Church

Eph. collectively and no Christians individually you in the

faith, sta le and steadfast,

In her are

study

of Romans 9-11

condition is attached. The latter deals with and is conditional, provided that you continue not shifting from the hope of the gospel. olf

implicitly concedes that some of God's elect people, foreknown and elected y God p.

not saved. The Israelites are God's

1 7, 170 . Even though,

present, the ma ority of them are e cluded from the supreme gift-participation p. 1 3 , in the future all Israel will e saved

Rom. 11:2 a .

necessarily

at

in the salvation

olf claims that

include all individual Israelites

all Israel

p.

at Rom. 11:2 a

183-4 . It connotes

does not

nonnumeri-

type of completeness, or completeness as a collectivity p. 184 . This means that some Israelites, whom God has elected to salvation p. 190 , ultimately do not participate in the salvation. When the Jews living at the consummation of salvation history are saved, God's faithfulness to his elect will e vindicated p. cal

185 .

implicitly

that God's faithfulness in

accomplishing the goal e understood collectively, not individually. Many times olf does not satisfactorily resolve tensions. She states that God disregards Israel's national election through A raham in presently omitting to call the ma ority of the Jews to salvation in Jesus Christ. Yet, citing Rom. 10:21, she writes that God is graciously e tending welcoming hands the whole day long to a diso edient and stiff-necked people p. 1 . Based on Rom 10:11 she claims that the gospel issues a welcome to Israel as to 'everyone who elieves' p. 1 7 . God does not call the Jews and welcomes them at the same time. How can this e possi le Paul e plicitly states in Rom 11:20 that the Jews' present e clusion from the salvation is due to their own un elief, not God's non-calhng. olf intimates that while all the Israelites were In treating 1 Cor. 10: 1-12, called y God and participated in God's redemption, the ma ority of them were not chosen to enter the promised land p. 12 . Translated into Christian situa tion, this means that only some Christians are chosen to attain the final salvation. This contradicts olf's own thesis. She insists that Paul's warning in 1 Cor. 10: 12 does not refer to losing salvation ut to losing the appearance of salvation. If this is true, eing the counterpart in the argument, the Israelites who died in the olf concedes

of his election is to


112

Book reviews

wilderness

redemption.

Yet

fited them all

ly

participated, ut in fact did not, in the redemptive purpose for God's people ene

to have

only appeared olf writes

God's

p. 12 . Appearance

e clusive. She cannot have

of salvation and actual salvation

are

mutual

oth.

JOSEPH S. WANG Professor of New Testament

As ury Theological Seminary

Netland, Harold A. Dissonant oices: Religious Pluralism and the Grand Rapids: Eerdmans, 1991. 323 pp. ISBN 0-8028-0 02-3. One of the

pressing

issues which

theologians

and

missiologists

uestion of Truth.

of the twentieth

century have faced is the relationship etween Christianity and other religions. Indeed, this is a matter of growing concern among many ordinary ehevers, owing to the fact that contact with persons of other faiths is increasingly common in our day. Harold Netland

this

uestion well prepared y his training and e pe parents Japan for many years, and he himself teaches studies at presently religious Tokyo Christian University. Moreover, his doctoral mentor at Claremont was John Hick, a distinguished philosopher of reli gion who is one of the most prolific and influential authors in the current de ate. In this ook, Netland aims to defend a position he calls e clusivism against various versions of religious plurahsm. E clusivism is defined as the view that rience. His

comes were

the central claims of

to

missionaries in

Christianity

are

true, and that where the claims of

Christianity religions the latter are to e re ected as false p.9 . Plurahsm, y contrast, holds that there is nothing normative or supe rior a out Christianity and that it is merely one of many e ually legitimate responses to the same divine reality p. 10 . Netland's fundamental thesis m this ook is that plurahsm cannot survive the uestion of truth. He lays the groundwork for demonstrating this hi the early chap ters y summari ing the asic eliefs of four different religions: Hinduism, Buddhism, Islam, and Shinto. His aim here is to show that the different rehgions seem clearly to e makmg mutually incompati le clauns a out the nature of the reh gious ultimate, the nature of the human predicament, and the nature of salvation. Plurahsts, of course, do not think the pro lem of confhctuig truth claims is insur mounta le. arious moves have een made in this regard. One of the most popu lar, which has een fashiona le m theological chcles for some tune, is the re ection of propositional truth. Rehgious nth, on the view, does not reside m propositions conflict with those of other


The

which state how

thmgs

it. Another mfluential

are,

Ashury Theological Journal

ut in the transformed hves of those who

113

appropriate

Kant-uispired distinction etween the rehgious ultimate as it is in itself, and the rehgious ultimate as e perienced and per ceived hi various historicaUy and culturally conditioned settings. Yet others uisist that rehgious truth is ineffa le, while others em race relativism, and some even go so

far

as

to

move

is to draw

a

suggest that the law of noncontradiction should e a andoned.

As Netland

recogni es, these are epistemological claims which re uire philo sophical negotiate. In the heart of his ook, chapters 4-7, Netland ana these, ly es along with other views, as advanced y such spokesmen as W. Cantwell Smith, Paul Knitter and Raimundo Panikkar. He persuasively argues that propositional truth is asic to other notions of truth that the ineffa ility the sis is self-refuting and that those who deny the law of noncontradiction are reduced to incoherence or silence. His most thorough criti ue, however, is reserved for his mentor, John Hick, whose sophisticated version of pluralism skill to

relies

heavily

on

the Kantian distinction noted a ove. Netland shows that those

finally left with religious agnosticism. ook is a helpful discussion of Evangelism, Dialogue, chapter and Tolerance, which commends dialogue, while dispelling some confused notions of tolerance. The only part of the ook I found really disappointing was the author's discussion of the fate of those who have never heard the gospel. Netland highlights the diversity of opinion among evangelicals on this uestion, ut refrains from pressing the matter or taking a position on it. But this did not dampen my enthusiasm for this ook. Netland has taken on an important issue, and has pro ed the philosophical roots of it. He has faced the truth uestion s uarely and has provided a clear and convincing defense of who follow Hick

are

The final

of the

Christian e clusivism.

JERRY L. WALLS Associate Professor of

Philosophy As ury Theological Seminary

of

Religion

Maclntyre, Alasdair. Three Rival ersions of Moral En uiry: Encyclopaedia, Genealogy, and Tradition: eing Gifford Lectures delivered in the University of Edin urgh in 1988. Notre Dame, Indiana: University of Notre Dame Press, 1990.

, 241

01877-4.

Alasdair

pp.

24.95 cloth. ISBN 0-2 8-01871-5.

Maclntyre

is

a

Roman Cathohc moral

10.95 paper. ISBN 0-2 8-

philosopher and,

after

having


1 14

Book Reviews

taught

at several universities in Britain and the United

McMahon Hank Professor of Philosophy at the Among the most important of his many previous

States, is

now the of Notre Dame.

University ooks are After

irtue

1981,

1988 . In this monograph of his 1988 Gifford Lectures, Maclntyre argues oth that rival moral theories cannot e evaluated e cept from some one particular stand point and that there is no neutral standpoint, independent of all theories, from 1984 and Whose

Justice

which such evaluation false and that it is

can

Rationality

take

place.

But he also argues that ethical relativism is having to stand out

to evaluate rival theories without

possi le given theory

side all of them. A alone

Which

can

e shown to

e

superior

to others if it and it

the failures and incoherences of its rivals in their

own terms e plain y their own standards. Maclntyre then focuses upon three very different and mutually antagonistic conceptions of moral en uiry, each stemming from a seminal late nineteenth-century te t p. 2 . The conse uent argument is com ecause each of these rivals is a ple , theory of moral en uiry and a moral theory and a theory of rationality and a theory of theory rivalry: In philosophical con troversies of any depth what divides the contending parties is characteristically in part how to characteri e the disagreement p. 44 . The first rival version is that of the eighteenth- and nineteenth-century Enlightenments' encyclopaedias, culminating in the Ninth Edition of the Encyclopaedia Britannica 1875-90 . This rival's distinguishing feature is elief in the unity of reason, independent of standpoint, and the continuous progress of science. In ethics there is on the encyclopaedist's view a set of conceptions of the and the duty, o hgation, righL good which have emerged from and can e shown to e superior to... their primitive, ancienL and other preenlightenment predecessors p. 42 . The second rival is the genealogical mode of Niet sche and such postcan

and

Niet scheans

as oucault. Its foundational document is Niet sche's On the Morals 1887 and one of its aims is to trace oth socially and concepGenealogy of how rancor and resentment on the part of the inferior tuaUy destroyed the aristo cratic no ihty of archaic heroes and su stituted a set of values in which a

priestly disguise for mahce and hate pp. 3940 . or the genealogist there is no a solute truth, ut only truth from some particu lar perspective: Where the encyclopaedist aspired to displace the Bi le as a canoni cal ook, the genealogist u tended to discredit the whole notion of a canon p. 25 . The third rival is the Thomistic tradition-informed dialectical enterprise p. 229 and its charter document is Pope Leo II s On the Restoration of Christian Philosophy Aeterni Patris, 1879 . This encychcal letter, Maclntyre writes, sum moned its readers to a renewal of an understanding of intellectual en uiry as the continuation of a specific type of tradition, that which achieved definitive e pression in the writings of A uinas, one the appropriation of which could not only provide the resources for radical criticism of the conception of rationality concern

for

purity

and

unpurity provided

a


The

Ashury Theological Journal

115

dominant in

nineteenth-century modernity and in the Ninth Edition, ut also and preserve ustify the canonical status of the Bi le as distinct from, yet hege monic over, all secular en uiry p. 25 . And this tradition's recognition despite

of the historical situatedness of all reason giving and stands the truth to which it aspires as timeless p. .

reason-offering,

it under

Maclntyre identifies each of these rivals with a specific literary genre there is unity of content and form. The genre of encyclopaedia is the encyclopaedia article e cathedra university lecture of genealogy, the aphorism and of tradi a

tion, the lecture

as

commentary upon

te ts

elieved to

e authoritative, and the elonged to the cultural

disputation. Maclntyre points milieu of the encyclopaedists, and that the form of the Gifford Lectures is, there fore, not neutral with regard to the three rivals. At this point Maclntyre argues that the Thomistic tradition is rationally supe rior to its rivals y way of posing pro lems for them to solve, not in Thomistic terms, ut in their own. The thesis of lecture eight is that post-Sidgwickian moral philosophy, udged y the standards of the Ninth Edition and of Sidgwick out that Adam Gifford

who

wrote the

Ethics

article himself, has turned

out to

e

a

du ious

type of

Sidgwick held that the theology of self-discrediting p. 189 . In lecture nine, Maclntyre goes on to argue that the pro lem posed for the genealogist y his or her own conception of personal identity is serious, though perhaps, unlike the encyclopaedist's, not fatal. In his tenth and final lecture, Maclntyre proposes an alternative kind of uni versity and it is here that there is most clearly a need for additional work. He contrasts the preli eral modern university, which was characteri ed y enforced and constrained agreements, with the encyclopaedic, li eral univer sity, which aspired to e a university of unconstrained agreements and hence a olished religious tests and e clusions p. 230 , ut rendered itself cultural ly irrelevant p. 219 . To these Maclntyre proposes a third alternative: the uni versity as a place of constrained disagreement, of imposed participation in conflicL in which a central responsi ility of higher education would e to initiate students into conflict. He adds that those engaged in teaching and en uiry within such a university would have to sustain it as an arena of conflict in which the most fundamental type of moral and theological disagreement lis accorded recognition pp. 230-231 . The challenge for Maclntyre, though, is to ut fundamental, moral and theological dis this how constrained, e plain from unconstrained disagreement. different e would agreement It was one thing for the thirteenth-century University of Paris to e as Maclntyre e plains in lecture five an arena with room for oth the Augustinian and Aristotehan traditions, and within which A uinas could merge the two. The discrepancies etween Aristotelianism and orthodo Christianity can e e cused at least somewhat y the fact that Aristotle wrote in the fourth century .c. But activity, self-discrediting the late nineteenth

in

ust

century

the way that

was


Book Reviews

11

twentieth-century scholars who have heard the gospel of orthodo Christianity, have re ected it, ut still insist that they are Christians At a out the time of his Gifford Lectures, Maclntyre left a formerly-Christian Methodist university ander ilt to oin the faculty of a university that calls what a out

Catholic,

itself

ut at which

a

Catholic

professor

is defined

application form, and at which to consider rival moral theories ecause

as one

who

Cathohc

stu particular have een no they position their own. I do not see how we could have a almost a out gen nothing taught uinely Christian, twentieth-century university without some type of religious test for its faculty, and, therefore, what Maclntyre calls constrained agreement. In the end, though Maclntyre's foes are legion, Protestant Christians should

checked dents

not

and

ing

o

a

are

in

on an

e among them. His account of the Thomistic integration of the Aristotelian Augustinian traditions provides the historical ackground for understand

the

Wesleyan holiness tradition, according to which ethical primacy resides, performing of certain kinds of actions, ut in our ecoming a certain

not in the

kind of person. And his account in lecture seven of Duns Scotus' and Occam's non-Thomistic distinction etween what God commands and what is good for the person commanded provides the historical mand ethics of many Lutherans and Calvinists. torical

ackground for the divine-com Everyone interested in the his

ackground of Protestant ethical theories or concerned a out the future of colleges and universities should surely give Maclntyre a serious look.

Protestant DA

ID W. LLJT

University

of Notre Dame

Notre Dame, Indiana

Weyer, Michel, Heiligungs wengung und Methodismus in deutschen Spracharum Einfuhrung in ein Kapitel methodistischer rommigkeitsgeschichte und kleine Chronik einer Bewegung des 19. Jahrhunderts mit ausgewahlten uellen und ur Geschichte der Bi liographic. Beitrage Evangelisch-methodistischen Kirche, 40 Stuttgart: Christliches erlagshaus, 1991. 25 pps. No ISBN. The

development

and influence of the

Wesleyan Holiness movements out England have een the su ect of remarka ly little research. Weyer has made a significant contri ution to the study of the Wesleyan Holiness tradition in Germany in this programmatic analysis of its interaction with the Methodist Church in German-speaking Europe, primarily Germany. The volume is not intended to e a definitive, e haustive analysis of side North America and


The

Ashury Theological Journal

117

development of German Methodist thought a out the Wesleyan Holiness adaptation of Christian perfection or a complete description of German interac tion with either the English or American Wesleyan Holiness adherents. Instead it poses the historiographical and current theological imperative for coming to terms with this aspect of German Methodist history. The volume takes as its point of departure Weyer's reflections upon the con tent of the archives of the Theologische Seminar der Evangelisch-methodistisch en Kirche in Reutlingen, Germany, where early correspondence from all three ranches, which merged to form the present church Wesleyan Methodist English , Methodist Episcopal Church and the Evangelical Association , reveal the fre uent recurrence of Wesleyan Holiness code language such as Christian Perfection, entire sanctification, and perfect love. Weyer goes on chap. 2, pp. 12-22 to reflect on the early period, the Wesleyan roots, the state Lutheran Church and the transmission of Wesleyan Holiness ideals and commitments efore within German Pentecostalism especially the Mulheim Bewegung asserting its importance in the contemporary conte t. Chapter 3 pp. 23-42 provides a status uaestionis as to the treatment or lack thereof of relations etween the Wesleyan Holiness movements and German Methodism in Methodist historiography. The standard histories of German Methodism are reviewed, including J. L. Nuelsen 1920 and 1929 , Ernst Gro 1931 , P. Scharpff 19 4 and the more recent work of C. E. Sommer and K. Steckel 1982 . lA work not discussed is Johannes Jungst, Der Methodismus in Deutschland: Ein Beitrag ur neuesten Kirchesgeschichte 3d. ed. Gies en: A. Topelmann, 190 . A general trend to minimi e Wesleyan Holiness influence and to distance German Methodism from the revivals of the 1870s stimulated y the preaching of Ro ert Pear sail Smith is demonstrated. Two e amples which clearly demonstrate the need to ree amine this received historiography are discussed. The 1873 essay, Der ruhling im Winter, which advocated Wesleyan Holiness concepts had wide read ership. The case of Loren Eisenhardt pp. 73-79 , a pastor who had worked as a theoretician and evangelist of holiness efore he and the fledgling movement were deeply influenced y R. P. Smith during 1875, is presented. Both the essay and Eisenhardt are manifestly deserving of individual analysis. Neither are discussed y P. leisch, Die moderne Gemeinschafts ewegung in Deutschland Leip ig: H. G. Wallmann, 1912 and oth have significant implications for leisch's historiogra phy. Weyer clearly demonstrates that R. P. Smith and the other early Keswick fig ures were not speaking in a vacuum. There follows a chronicle of the movement pp. 82-139 which hsts signifi cant moments in the history of the Wesleyan Holiness traditions, German Methodism and their conte ts from 1835-1940. Weyer accepts the theories of in Timothy Smith, inter alia, that there was a declension of holiness teaching A. As revivals. Methodism which resulted in the Palmer and inney Coppedge has convincingly argued Entire Sanctification in Early American Methodism: the


Book Reviews

118

1812-1835, Wesleyan Theological Journal 13 1978 : 34-50 , this thesis needs

ree amined. While

tive of research foci

helpful deserving

as an

of

orientation to the traditions

The

largest

weU

as

to

e

indica

scholarly attention, one would have wished for lications together with more i liog

details of events, conferences and pu raphy. Argua ly the most important events more

as

section of the volume

are

mentioned.

pp. 140-235

provides

e tracts from

ooks,

ecclesial documents, letters and liturgies, written etween 1872 and 1911, rele vant to the study of the Wesleyan Holiness movements in Germany. These orig inal

sources

lution of the

elo uently official

attest to the presence of the

ecclesiastical

perspective

tradition, its impact, the

and the

development

evo

of the the

Without dou t, the historiography of German Methodism and of related traditions in German and Swit erland needs to e revised to achieve a more accurate understanding of their cultural and religious structures.

ological concepts.

anthology is a very useful feature of the volume. Outside the Methodist Church and eyond the scope of this volume, an analysis is needed of the influence in Germany and on German Methodism of

The

American

Wesleyan Holiness

Church of God

mission results

Church of God Anderson

Cleveland

Church of the Na arene American German the Healing Movements and The Salvation Army, as weU

pu lications , indigenous German Pentecostalism which adheres to Wesleyan Holiness understandings of Christian holiness. Relations etween the Methodists and Wesleyan Holiness adherents within the state Lutheran Church, the Gemeinschafts ewegung, and the Evangelical Alliance will also e a fruitful area for additional investigation. While one might wish for more information, documents and analysis, as well as an inde to the vast num er of names mentioned, Weyer's volume provides, for the first time, entree into the larger world of German Methodism and the Wesleyan Holiness movements. The classified i liography is helpful, providing additional guidance to the historiographical agenda so clearly esta lished in the work. Weyer's ook is a truly significant scholarly contri ution to the intercultural structures of American Wesleyan Holiness history and thought. It will remain a standard reference tool for the of the study Wesleyan Holiness traditions. Holiness as

DA

ID BUNDY

Associate Professor of Church

History Theological Seminary Indianapolis, Indiana Christian


The

Ashury Theological Journal

119

Kilner, John ., Who Lives Who Dies Ethical Criteria in Patient Selection. New Haven, CT: Yale University Press, 1990, 359 pages. ISBN 0-300-04 80-4.

John Kilner has

written

cal, import. This is

ook that is of

a

ook

scholarly, as well as practi actually used and deemed

enormous

documenting as they make decisions as to who will, and who will not, receive scarce lifesaving medical resources. This is also a ook doc umenting the de ates over these same criteria, and carefully analy ing the possi ilities for consensus, and reasoning toward considered, ethical guidelines for the use of these criteria. The need for roadly accepta le criteria in the selection of recipients of limited hfesaving medical resources is, as Kilner himself rightly notes, widely recogni ed as one of the crucial ethical issues of the day, and the need for such criteria is underscored in the fields of medicine, pu lic policy, law, sociology, ethics, religion, industry, and ournalism, to name a few. p. i important y

Kilner's

a

medical

practitioners

ook constitutes

a

criteria

su stantial contri ution to all of these fields and to

lifesaving decision-making, as such. To egin with, Kilner has carried out his own empirical research. In the United States, he sent uestionnaires to all of the medical directors of kidney dialysis and kidney transplantation facilities. He had them rate si teen patientselection criteria as to their degree of importance and as to their willingness to use them. Only one of these, se , was regarded as virtually unimportant and not to e considered to guide practice. To provide a cross-cultural perspective, Kilner conducted his own research, studying the caregivers, modern and traditional, among the Akam a people in Kenya. This proved to e highly important. or e ample, some U.S. philosophers have claimed that it is counterintuitive to prefer an older person to someone younger in selecting who receives scarce resources the Akam a tradition, how ever, has a preference for older persons when it comes to patient selection in sit uations of scarcity. Kilner devotes a chapter to each of the fifteen selection criteria other than se . These are, in order considered: social value, favored group, resources re uired, special responsi ilities, age, psychological a ility, supportive environment, med ical enefit, imminent death, likelihood of enefit, length of enefit, uality of enefit, willingness, a ility to pay, and random selection. In each of these chap ters, Kilner makes use of his comprehensive survey of the literature to present the reader with all of the arguments oth for and against the use of the selection criterion eing discussed. Then, with great care, he sorts out these arguments to see what asis there is for what he calls possi le common ground. This type of analysis proves to e very valua le. It leads, for e ample, to specifying certain conditions, not currently recogni ed, under which the criterion imminent death should e used. And, in one case, it leads to a strong case for re ecting asis of their alleged social value. on the any attempt to select patients


Book Reviews

120

chapter concludes with a highly relevant case to which the criterion in uestion is applied, illustrating what has een learned from the analysis imme diately preceding it. Kilner concludes with two more chapters, one discussing decision-making when the scarce medical resources in uestion are used in e periments, and the other, the final chapter, discussing his own proposal for patient selection when Each

medical

resources are scarce.

recommendations, Kilner egins his final uest for possi le chapter to e common there seven different appear ground. Everything considered, selection criteria which are widely accepta le: medical enefit, imminent death, likelihood of enefit, resources re uired, special responsi ilities, willingness to accept treatment , and random selection most often in the form of first-come, first-served p. 22 . After indicating the pro lems associated with a first-come, first-served approach to random selection, and also with likelihood of enefit, As

a

prelude with

Kilner offers

ed

lifesaving 1.

to

the

following

medical

Only patients

own

asic

approach

to the selection of

recipients

of limit

resources:

who

treatment criteria

2. Availa le

his

presenting

overview of what he has discovered in his

an

are

satisfy

enefit and

the medical

e considered

to

eligi le.

willingness-to-accept-

eligi le patients who satisfy eligi le patients who satisfy the special-responsi ilities or resources-re uired criterion. resources are

e

to

given

first to

the imminent-death criterion and ne t to

3. If

still availa le, recipients are to e randomly selected, from among the remaining eligi le patients p. 230 .

resources are

generally y lottery, Kilner is

preference

aware

for

a

lottery

acceptance. At the

selecting patients

formed with the values

that his same

which

e ually challenged y

time, he is are

enefit of such

eing sought.

achieva le

of the likelihood of

re ection

enefit criterion and his

to achieve random selection will not

His

an

proposal

Even

aware

that the

readily gain wide specific views of those

his recommendations, have not een sifting of the arguments and the

e tensive

is close to what he has discovered to

conflicts,

e

an

computeri ed selecting organ transplant recipients. One reason for the conflict lies in the priority Kilner gives to arguments which are as to person-oriented opposed productivity-oriented. Person-oriented as such, regardless of the goods they produce produc arguments respect people tivity-oriented arguments promote the achievement of some good, such as effi ciency or happiness p. 227 . In the United States the two types of arguments tend to e given virtually e ual weight. In Kenya, person-oriented arguments are This means that Kilner's proposal seeks to save as greatly predominant. system

consensus.

now

eing developed

so

it

in the U.S. for

as

he notes, with the


The

many lives as possi le and to do each individual to have access to

Ashury Theological Journal

121

way that preserves the e ual right of lifesaving treatment as much as possi le. so

in

a

Kilner's ook is a ma or accomplishment and a very welcome one at that. To egin with, he has generated highly significant data where there was none. Not only do we know now what patient selection criteria loom large in importance

and

use

U.S.,

in

we

respect

some

of the

also have

areas

some

in which

data a out

to such decisions.

y how much

resource

education

scarce resource

decisions

made in the

are

very different cultural tradition with healers from this tradition are influenced

a

urthermore, they have those who attend medical school

decisions much

more

like their U.S.

implicit

counterparts.

This

view

scarce

uncovers an

moral direction within contemporary, scientifically oriented medical education away from the Akam a emphasis on respect for persons toward an

emphasis on productivity or good conse uences. Not only has Kilner made some highly original contri utions to the literature ut he has also given this area of research and reflec on patient selection criteria, tion the most comprehensive survey and analysis of the e isting literature. This

ook has 238 pages of te t, 57 pages of notes, and 58 pages of references which een cited. It is in itself the est place to egin any further research on

have

scarce

medical

resources

and the criteria for their

nary nature of the content and methods Kilner has

wide

use.

employed,

of scholars will need to consult his work

variety e rought up

and to

a

set of

guidelines

which

guidelines are, in my view, etter than accomplish a ove all is to assure, to a higher

interdiscipli

the research of

oth to avoid

to date.

But Kilner has also offered tive. These

Given the

are

a

duplication

distinctive and innova

anything currently in use. What degree than any of the previous

they approaches, that individuals will not die for lack of a scarce resource. Scholars, policy makers and health care professionals should study Kilner's proposal care fully. rankly, I hope it is widely adopted with any refinements and adaptations that may prove necessary or desira le as it is applied. Kilner himself suggests asic struc some alterations which others might prefer which would not alter the ture of his approach and its priorities on egahtarianism and saving hves. There may e those who would uestion Kilner's use of the special responsi ilities criterion. Some who are consistently person-oriented or deontologists may see the criterion of special responsi ilities as an intolera le deviation from this way of reasoning. Some who are more productivity-oriented may see this criterion as allowing for a wider use of productivity-oriented guidelines than Kilner has allowed for in his proposed set of guidelines. It would not e correct, however, to view Kilner as utilitarian. or utilitarians, what is morally right is determined y the good or value eing produced y the action or policy in ues tion. Kilner is choosing etween two actions which are oth morally right y rea son of saving lives, and claiming that it is sometimes the most right act to choose to save the hfe of someone whose life is directly tied to the saving of other lives.


Book Reviews

122

In

short, he is weighing relative moral harms should either of

two

individuals

morally significant such as these that virtually everyone would treat a physi cian first in a situation in which doing so would avert a num er of other deaths, y averting the death of the physician. In any event, Kilner's otherwise strict egahtarianism is on the line here, and he discusses special safeguards to help assure that the invocation of special responsi ilities as a selection criterion will remain a rare e ception and not the rule. Making scarce resource decisions does strain our ingenuity as we seek, as ased

die

on

stand. It is for

relations in which these individuals

all the

reasons

human communities, to retain those moral values on which our common life depends. Kilner recogni es, in the last segment of his concluding chapter, that he

priority given to person-oriented criteria, especially the some regard as humane and others as inhumane. What is the normatively human to which humaneness refers Kilner speaks here of the Akam a use of stories y means of which moral ideas are connected needs to use

undergird

the

of random selection which

to their total life conte t. With the rise of seculari ation in the

Christian

story

has

een

increasingly neglected.

Kilner

West, the Judeo-

suggests

that this forma

story for Western medicine e rought ack into the picture. Although I share Kilner's concern to attend to what our Jewish and Christian heritages can tive

teach us, the necessity to give priority to life-affirming and egalitarian guide lines in patient selection arises within a story human eings share: that human

eings

of

e ual worth, and that their lives are ultimately inviola le, are func re uisites of communities as such, of cooperative action within them, and of morality itself. Everyone who has een orn, nurtured, and protected in their dependence, shares in that story, however uni ue their own story may other are

tional

wise

e. I would invite Kilner not to overlook these

common

heritage in any future contri utions he makes to the ethical criteria in patient selection. Given the human

impressive study, I look forward to e ceedingly difficult kinds of decisions. very

ARTHUR

Mary

School of Pu lic Health and

Population Ehtics

faculty mem er. School of Divinity Harvard University Cam ridge, Massachusetts

aspects of

our

understanding of uality of his first,

very high Kilner's continued reflection

J. DYCK

B. Saltonstall Professor of

our

on

these


The Ashury

Kilner, John

. Who Lives

Haven: Yale

123

Who Dies : Ethical Criteria in Patient Selection. New

University Press,

At the time he wrote this

Theological Journal

1990. 359 pp.

Hard ack, ISBN 0-300-04 80-4.

volume, the author

professor of social As ury Theological Seminary ad unct professor of medical ethics at the of Dr. Kilner is University Kentucky. formally trained in ethics, ut also has conducted studies of ethical decision-making, regarding allo cation of medical resources y medical directors of United States kidney dialysis centers and y health care workers of the Akam a people of Kenya, Africa. The title of the ook derives from the author's conviction that recent and costly hfe-saving reakthroughs in medicine can genuinely prolong hfe e pectancy, ut and medical ethics at

was

associate

and

may e unavaila le to all whose illnesses re uire them. While not attempting to welcome or encourage such patient-selection decision-making, the author pre dicts that it win

e necessary and contends that

thoughtful analysis of such deci implementation provides the most rational approach. In countries where health care resources are dramatically limited, decisions as to whom win receive certain costly or even not so costly medical technology is a daily event. Even in the prosperous United States, soaring health care costs, a growing imder-insured or uninsured population, and limited amounts of certain technology e.g., organs for transplantation , are forcing decision-makers to choose one patient over another. Rather than avoid thinking a out selection criteria for scarce medical resources, the author contends that one ought to assess all possi le selection criteria and assem le all those found accepta le into an overall approach to patient selection. Such an approach comprises the ma ority of the ook. Dr. Kilner then proceeds to analy e si teen criteria which might e used for patient selection. These criteria include: social criteria the impact that selection decisions will have on society at large and the amount of resources used for one sions in advance of their

many persons social medical criteria decision ased upon age psychological a ility medical criteria the enefit of such treatment, the likelihood of death if no treatment is given imminence of death and the likeli person and or

versus

hood, length,

uality of any enefit of the treatment and personal criteria willingness patient to have the treatment and their a ility to pay. Each of these criteria are thoroughly analy ed y reviewing their historical use either in the United States or in Kenya, the ustifications for such a criterion, the weak nesses of the criterion, and finally y attempting to find common ground that and oth to opponents of that particular criterion. proponents might appeal After a detailed analysis of each of the si teen criteria, the author concludes that there are seven different criteria which appear to e widely accepta le in the or

of the

ethical and medical culture. These are the medical enefit, of imminence death, likelihood of enefit, resources re uired, patients with spe cial responsi ilities, willingness of patients to accept treatment, and a random selection usually in the form of first-come, first-served . current American

process


124

Book Reviews

As a nephrologist kidney specialist working in the field of dialysis and trans plantation for the past twenty-five years, I've had considera le e perience with the reality of limited resources and the need for some type of decision-making process for the allocation of those resources. This ook provides a comprehensive review of all reasona le criteria for making such decisions. The thoroughness with which each criterion is reviewed is oth noteworthy and at times repetitive and la orious. Nevertheless, the physician, health care worker, or lay person who wishes to study these issues and ecome etter informed a out this important ethical area will find in this ook a rich set of resources. Each chapter is thorough ly documented with an e tensive i liography. There is a rather detailed inde . The author also makes e tensive use of e amples from the organ transplant, kid ney dialysis arena to su stantiate and illustrate how decision making criteria either have een used in the past or might need to e viewed in the future. urther, at the conclusion of each chapter, a case is used to illustrate how the cri terion under discussion might e applied in a real life situation. Dr. Kilner, whose personal Christian faith is known to me and is reflected in his other writings, does not su stantiate any of his arguments y reference to the Christian faith or to i lical authority. In a pluralistic culture such as ours, this may allow his ook a wider readership. Importantly, the i lical asis for his ethi cal thinking is latent throughout the ook. In the final chapter. Dr. Kilner reminds his readers that ethics ased solely on a materialistic view of the world lack cohesiveness and credi ility. He suggests that this very e ercise may re uire some to e amine the I

asis for ethical decisions

elieve this

ook is

a

ny the allocation of health dies. PHILLIP M.

HALL, M.D.

Department

of

Hypertension

The Cleveland Clinic

well

care resources

as

the decisions themselves.

and to

Nephrology

ice Chairman Division of Medicine

Cleveland, Ohio

as

fine contri ution to the

oundation

thinking which must accompa deciding who lives and who




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